The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
The Rise of the Rest
By Fareed Zakaria
Newsweek
Pages 24-31
© May 12, 2008
It's true China is booming, Russia is growing more
assertive, terrorism is a threat. But if America is
losing the ability to dictate to this new world, it
has not lost the ability to lead.
Americans are glum at the moment. No, I mean really glum.
In April, a new poll revealed that 81 percent of the
American people believe that the country is on the "wrong
track." In the 25 years that pollsters have asked this
question, last month's response was by far the most negative.
Other polls, asking similar questions, found levels of gloom
that were even more alarming, often at 30- and 40-year highs.
There are reasons to be pessimistic—a financial panic and
looming recession, a seemingly endless war in Iraq, and
the ongoing threat of terrorism. But the facts on the
ground—unemployment numbers, foreclosure rates, deaths
from terror attacks—are simply not dire enough to explain
the present atmosphere of malaise.
American anxiety springs from something much deeper, a
sense that large and disruptive forces are coursing
through the world. In almost every industry, in every
aspect of life, it feels like the patterns of the past
are being scrambled. "Whirl is king, having driven out
Zeus," wrote Aristophanes 2,400 years ago. And—for the
first time in living memory—the United States does not
seem to be leading the charge. Americans see that a new
world is coming into being, but fear it is one being shaped
in distant lands and by foreign people.
Look around. The world's tallest building is in Taipei,
and will soon be in Dubai. Its largest publicly traded
company is in Beijing. Its biggest refinery is being
constructed in India. Its largest passenger airplane is
built in Europe. The largest investment fund on the planet
is in Abu Dhabi; the biggest movie industry is Bollywood,
not Hollywood. Once quintessentially American icons have
been usurped by the natives. The largest Ferris wheel is
in Singapore. The largest casino is in Macao, which overtook
Las Vegas in gambling revenues last year. America no longer
dominates even its favorite sport, shopping. The Mall of
America in Minnesota once boasted that it was the largest
shopping mall in the world. Today it wouldn't make the top
ten. In the most recent rankings, only two of the world's
ten richest people are American. These lists are arbitrary
and a bit silly, but consider that only ten years ago, the
United States would have serenely topped almost every one
of these categories.
These factoids reflect a seismic shift in power and attitudes.
It is one that I sense when I travel around the world. In
America, we are still debating the nature and extent of
anti-Americanism. One side says that the problem is real
and worrying and that we must woo the world back. The other
says this is the inevitable price of power and that many of
these countries are envious—and vaguely French—so we can
safely ignore their griping. But while we argue over why
they hate us, "they" have moved on, and are now far more
interested in other, more dynamic parts of the globe. The
world has shifted from anti-Americanism to post-Americanism.
I. The End of Pax Americana
During the 1980s, when I would visit India—where I grew
up—most Indians were fascinated by the United States. Their
interest, I have to confess, was not in the important power
players in Washington or the great intellectuals in Cambridge.
People would often ask me about … Donald Trump. He was the
very symbol of the United States—brassy, rich, and modern.
He symbolized the feeling that if you wanted to find the
biggest and largest anything, you had to look to America.
Today, outside of entertainment figures, there is no
comparable interest in American personalities. If you
wonder why, read India's newspapers or watch its television.
There are dozens of Indian businessmen who are now wealthier
than the Donald. Indians are obsessed by their own vulgar
real estate billionaires. And that newfound interest in
their own story is being replicated across much of the
world.
How much? Well, consider this fact. In 2006 and 2007, 124
countries grew their economies at over 4 percent a year.
That includes more than 30 countries in Africa. Over the
last two decades, lands outside the industrialized West
have been growing at rates that were once unthinkable. While
there have been booms and busts, the overall trend has been
unambiguously upward. Antoine van Agtmael, the fund manager
who coined the term "emerging markets," has identified the
25 companies most likely to be the world's next great
multinationals. His list includes four companies each from
Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, and Taiwan; three from India,
two from China, and one each from Argentina, Chile, Malaysia,
and South Africa. This is something much broader than the
much-ballyhooed rise of China or even Asia. It is the rise
of the rest—the rest of the world.
We are living through the third great power shift in modern
history. The first was the rise of the Western world, around
the 15th century. It produced the world as we know it
now—science and technology, commerce and capitalism, the
industrial and agricultural revolutions. It also led to
the prolonged political dominance of the nations of the
Western world. The second shift, which took place in the
closing years of the 19th century, was the rise of the
United States. Once it industrialized, it soon became the
most powerful nation in the world, stronger than any likely
combination of other nations. For the last 20 years, America's
superpower status in every realm has been largely
unchallenged—something that's never happened before in
history, at least since the Roman Empire dominated the
known world 2,000 years ago. During this Pax Americana,
the global economy has accelerated dramatically. And that
expansion is the driver behind the third great power shift
of the modern age—the rise of the rest.
At the military and political level, we still live in a
unipolar world. But along every other dimension—industrial,
financial, social, cultural—the distribution of power is
shifting, moving away from American dominance. In terms of
war and peace, economics and business, ideas and art, this
will produce a landscape that is quite different from the
one we have lived in until now—one defined and directed from
many places and by many peoples.
The post-American world is naturally an unsettling prospect
for Americans, but it should not be. This will not be a
world defined by the decline of America but rather the rise
of everyone else. It is the result of a series of positive
trends that have been progressing over the last 20 years,
trends that have created an international climate of
unprecedented peace and prosperity.
I know. That's not the world that people perceive. We are
told that we live in dark, dangerous times. Terrorism, rogue
states, nuclear proliferation, financial panics, recession,
outsourcing, and illegal immigrants all loom large in the
national discourse. Al Qaeda, Iran, North Korea, China,
Russia are all threats in some way or another. But just
how violent is today's world, really?
A team of scholars at the University of Maryland has been
tracking deaths caused by organized violence. Their data
show that wars of all kinds have been declining since the
mid-1980s and that we are now at the lowest levels of global
violence since the 1950s. Deaths from terrorism are reported
to have risen in recent years. But on closer examination, 80
percent of those casualties come from Afghanistan and Iraq,
which are really war zones with ongoing insurgencies—and
the overall numbers remain small. Looking at the evidence,
Harvard's polymath professor Steven Pinker has ventured to
speculate that we are probably living "in the most peaceful
time of our species' existence."
Why does it not feel that way? Why do we think we live in
scary times? Part of the problem is that as violence has
been ebbing, information has been exploding. The last 20
years have produced an information revolution that brings
us news and, most crucially, images from around the world
all the time. The immediacy of the images and the intensity
of the 24-hour news cycle combine to produce constant hype.
Every weather disturbance is the "storm of the decade."
Every bomb that explodes is BREAKING NEWS. Because the
information revolution is so new, we—reporters, writers,
readers, viewers—are all just now figuring out how to put
everything in context.
We didn't watch daily footage of the two million people
who died in Indochina in the 1970s, or the million who
perished in the sands of the Iran-Iraq war ten years later.
We saw little of the civil war in the Congo in the 1990s,
where millions died. But today any bomb that goes off, any
rocket that is fired, any death that results, is documented
by someone, somewhere and ricochets instantly across the
world. Add to this terrorist attacks, which are random and
brutal. "That could have been me," you think. Actually, your
chances of being killed in a terrorist attack are tiny—for
an American, smaller than drowning in your bathtub. But it
doesn't feel like that.
The threats we face are real. Islamic jihadists are a
nasty bunch—they do want to attack civilians everywhere.
But it is increasingly clear that militants and suicide
bombers make up a tiny portion of the world's 1.3 billion
Muslims. They can do real damage, especially if they get
their hands on nuclear weapons. But the combined efforts
of the world's governments have effectively put them on
the run and continue to track them and their money. Jihad
persists, but the jihadists have had to scatter, work in
small local cells, and use simple and undetectable weapons.
They have not been able to hit big, symbolic targets,
especially ones involving Americans. So they blow up
bombs in cafés, marketplaces, and subway stations. The
problem is that in doing so, they kill locals and alienate
ordinary Muslims. Look at the polls. Support for violence
of any kind has dropped dramatically over the last five
years in all Muslim countries.
Militant groups have reconstituted in certain areas where
they exploit a particular local issue or have support
from a local ethnic group or sect, most worryingly in
Pakistan and Afghanistan where Islamic radicalism has
become associated with Pashtun identity politics. But as
a result, these groups are becoming more local and less
global. Al Qaeda in Iraq, for example, has turned into a
group that is more anti-Shiite than anti-American. The
bottom line is this: since 9/11, Al Qaeda Central, the
gang run by Osama bin Laden, has not been able to launch
a single major terror attack in the West or any Arab
country—its original targets. They used to do terrorism,
now they make videotapes. Of course one day they will get
lucky again, but that they have been stymied for almost
seven years points out that in this battle between
governments and terror groups, the former need not despair.
Some point to the dangers posed by countries like Iran.
These rogue states present real problems, but look at
them in context. The American economy is 68 times the
size of Iran's. Its military budget is 110 times that of
the mullahs. Were Iran to attain a nuclear capacity, it
would complicate the geopolitics of the Middle East. But
none of the problems we face compare with the dangers posed
by a rising Germany in the first half of the 20th century
or an expansionist Soviet Union in the second half. Those
were great global powers bent on world domination. If this
is 1938, as some neoconservatives tell us, then Iran is
Romania, not Germany.
Others paint a dark picture of a world in which dictators
are on the march. China and Russia and assorted other oil
potentates are surging. We must draw the battle lines now,
they warn, and engage in a great Manichean struggle that
will define the next century. Some of John McCain's
rhetoric has suggested that he adheres to this dire,
dyspeptic view. But before we all sign on for a new Cold
War, let's take a deep breath and gain some perspective.
Today's rising great powers are relatively benign by
historical measure. In the past, when countries grew rich
they've wanted to become great military powers, overturn
the existing order, and create their own empires or
spheres of influence. But since the rise of Japan and
Germany in the 1960s and 1970s, none have done this,
choosing instead to get rich within the existing
international order. China and India are clearly moving
in this direction. Even Russia, the most aggressive and
revanchist great power today, has done little that
compares with past aggressors. The fact that for the
first time in history, the United States can contest
Russian influence in Ukraine—a country 4,800 miles away
from Washington that Russia has dominated or ruled for
350 years—tells us something about the balance of power
between the West and Russia.
Compare Russia and China with where they were 35 years
ago. At the time both (particularly Russia) were great
power threats, actively conspiring against the United
States, arming guerrilla movement across the globe,
funding insurgencies and civil wars, blocking every American
plan in the United Nations. Now they are more integrated
into the global economy and society than at any point in
at least 100 years. They occupy an uncomfortable gray zone,
neither friends nor foes, cooperating with the United States
and the West on some issues, obstructing others. But how
large is their potential for trouble? Russia's military
spending is $35 billion, or 1/20th of the Pentagon's.
China has about 20 nuclear missiles that can reach the
United States. We have 830 missiles, most with multiple
warheads, that can reach China. Who should be worried
about whom? Other rising autocracies like Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf states are close U.S. allies that shelter
under America's military protection, buy its weapons,
invest in its companies, and follow many of its diktats.
With Iran's ambitions growing in the region, these countries
are likely to become even closer allies, unless America
gratuitously alienates them.
II. The Good News
In July 2006, I spoke with a senior member of the Israeli
government, a few days after Israel's war with Hezbollah
had ended. He was genuinely worried about his country's
physical security. Hezbollah's rockets had reached farther
into Israel than people had believed possible. The military
response had clearly been ineffectual: Hezbollah launched as
many rockets on the last day of the war as on the first.
Then I asked him about the economy—the area in which he
worked. His response was striking. "That's puzzled all of
us," he said. "The stock market was higher on the last day
of the war than on the first! The same with the shekel."
The government was spooked, but the market wasn't.
Or consider the Iraq War, which has produced deep, lasting
chaos and dysfunction in that country. Over two million
refugees have crowded into neighboring lands. That would
seem to be the kind of political crisis guaranteed to
spill over. But as I've traveled in the Middle East over
the last few years, I've been struck by how little Iraq's
troubles have destabilized the region. Everywhere you go,
people angrily denounce American foreign policy. But most
Middle Eastern countries are booming. Iraq's neighbors—Turkey,
Jordan, and Saudi Arabia—are enjoying unprecedented prosperity.
The Gulf states are busy modernizing their economies and
societies, asking the Louvre, New York University, and
Cornell Medical School to set up remote branches in the
desert. There's little evidence of chaos, instability, and
rampant Islamic fundamentalism.
The underlying reality across the globe is of enormous
vitality. For the first time ever, most countries around
the world are practicing sensible economics. Consider
inflation. Over the past 20 years hyperinflation, a
problem that used to bedevil large swaths of the world
from Turkey to Brazil to Indonesia, has largely vanished,
tamed by successful fiscal and monetary policies. The
results are clear and stunning. The share of people living
on $1 a day has plummeted from 40 percent in 1981 to 18
percent in 2004 and is estimated to drop to 12 percent by
2015. Poverty is falling in countries that house 80 percent
of the world's population. There remains real poverty in the
world—most worryingly in 50 basket-case countries that
contain 1 billion people—but the overall trend has never
been more encouraging. The global economy has more than
doubled in size over the last 15 years and is now approaching
$54 trillion! Global trade has grown by 133 percent in the
same period. The expansion of the global economic pie has
been so large, with so many countries participating, that
it has become the dominating force of the current era. Wars,
terrorism, and civil strife cause disruptions temporarily
but eventually they are overwhelmed by the waves of globalization.
These circumstances may not last, but it is worth understanding
what the world has looked like for the past few decades.
III. A New Nationalism
Of course, global growth is also responsible for some of
the biggest problems in the world right now. It has produced
tons of money—what businesspeople call liquidity—that moves
around the world. The combination of low inflation and lots
of cash has meant low interest rates, which in turn have
made people act greedily and/or stupidly. So we have witnessed
over the last two decades a series of bubbles—in East Asian
countries, technology stocks, housing, subprime mortgages,
and emerging market equities. Growth also explains one of
the signature events of our times—soaring commodity prices.
$100 oil is just the tip of the barrel. Almost all commodities
are at 200-year highs. Food, only a few decades ago in danger
of price collapse, is now in the midst of a scary rise. None
of this is due to dramatic fall-offs in supply. It is demand,
growing global demand, that is fueling these prices. The
effect of more and more people eating, drinking, washing,
driving, and consuming will have seismic effects on the
global system. These may be high-quality problems, but they
are deep problems nonetheless.
The most immediate effect of global growth is the appearance
of new economic powerhouses on the scene. It is an accident
of history that for the last several centuries, the richest
countries in the world have all been very small in terms of
population. Denmark has 5.5 million people, the Netherlands
has 16.6 million. The United States is the biggest of the
bunch and has dominated the advanced industrial world. But
the real giants—China, India, Brazil—have been sleeping,
unable or unwilling to join the world of functioning economies.
Now they are on the move and naturally, given their size,
they will have a large footprint on the map of the future.
Even if people in these countries remain relatively poor,
as nations their total wealth will be massive. Or to put
it another way, any number, no matter how small, when
multiplied by 2.5 billion becomes a very big number. (2.5
billion is the population of China plus India.)
The rise of China and India is really just the most obvious
manifestation of a rising world. In dozens of big countries,
one can see the same set of forces at work—a growing economy,
a resurgent society, a vibrant culture, and a rising sense of
national pride. That pride can morph into something uglier.
For me, this was vividly illustrated a few years ago when I
was chatting with a young Chinese executive in an Internet
café in Shanghai. He wore Western clothes, spoke fluent
English, and was immersed in global pop culture. He was a
product of globalization and spoke its language of bridge
building and cosmopolitan values. At least, he did so until
we began talking about Taiwan, Japan, and even the United
States. (We did not discuss Tibet, but I'm sure had we done
so, I could have added it to this list.) His responses were
filled with passion, bellicosity, and intolerance. I felt as
if I were in Germany in 1910, speaking to a young German
professional, who would have been equally modern and yet
also a staunch nationalist.
As economic fortunes rise, so inevitably does nationalism.
Imagine that your country has been poor and marginal for
centuries. Finally, things turn around and it becomes a
symbol of economic progress and success. You would be proud,
and anxious that your people win recognition and respect
throughout the world.
In many countries such nationalism arises from a pent-up
frustration over having to accept an entirely Western, or
American, narrative of world history—one in which they are
miscast or remain bit players. Russians have long chafed
over the manner in which Western countries remember World
War II. The American narrative is one in which the United
States and Britain heroically defeat the forces of fascism.
The Normandy landings are the climactic highpoint of the
war—the beginning of the end. The Russians point out,
however, that in fact the entire Western front was a sideshow.
Three quarters of all German forces were engaged on the
Eastern front fighting Russian troops, and Germany suffered
70 percent of its casualties there. The Eastern front
involved more land combat than all other theaters of World
War II put together.
Such divergent national perspectives always existed. But
today, thanks to the information revolution, they are
amplified, echoed, and disseminated. Where once there
were only the narratives laid out by The New York Times,
Time, Newsweek, the BBC, and CNN, there are now dozens of
indigenous networks and channels—from Al Jazeera to New
Delhi's NDTV to Latin America's Telesur. The result is
that the "rest" are now dissecting the assumptions and
narratives of the West and providing alternative views.
A young Chinese diplomat told me in 2006, "When you tell
us that we support a dictatorship in Sudan to have access
to its oil, what I want to say is, 'And how is that different
from your support of a medieval monarchy in Saudi Arabia?'
We see the hypocrisy, we just don't say anything—yet."
The fact that newly rising nations are more strongly
asserting their ideas and interests is inevitable in a
post-American world. This raises a conundrum—how to get
a world of many actors to work together. The traditional
mechanisms of international cooperation are fraying. The
U.N. Security Council has as its permanent members the
victors of a war that ended more than 60 years ago. The
G8 does not include China, India or Brazil—the three
fastest-growing large economies in the world—and yet
claims to represent the movers and shakers of the world
economy. By tradition, the IMF is always headed by a
European and the World Bank by an American. This "tradition,"
like the segregated customs of an old country club, might
be charming to an insider. But to the majority who live
outside the West, it seems bigoted. Our challenge is this:
Whether the problem is a trade dispute or a human rights
tragedy like Darfur or climate change, the only solutions
that will work are those involving many nations. But
arriving at solutions when more countries and more
non-governmental players are feeling empowered will be
harder than ever.
IV. The Next American Century
Many look at the vitality of this emerging world and
conclude that the United States has had its day.
"Globalization is striking back," Gabor Steingart,
an editor at Germany's leading news magazine, Der
Spiegel, writes in a best-selling book. As others
prosper, he argues, the United States has lost key
industries, its people have stopped saving money, and
its government has become increasingly indebted to Asian
central banks. The current financial crisis has only
given greater force to such fears.
But take a step back. Over the last 20 years, globalization
has been gaining depth and breadth. America has benefited
massively from these trends. It has enjoyed unusually robust
growth, low unemployment and inflation, and received hundreds
of billions of dollars in investment. These are not signs of
economic collapse. Its companies have entered new countries
and industries with great success, using global supply chains
and technology to stay in the vanguard of efficiency. U.S.
exports and manufacturing have actually held their ground
and services have boomed.
The United States is currently ranked as the globe's most
competitive economy by the World Economic Forum. It remains
dominant in many industries of the future like nanotechnology,
biotechnology, and dozens of smaller high-tech fields. Its
universities are the finest in the world, making up 8 of the
top ten and 37 of the top fifty, according to a prominent
ranking produced by Shanghai Jiao Tong University. A few years
ago the National Science Foundation put out a scary and
much-discussed statistic. In 2004, the group said, 950,000
engineers graduated from China and India, while only 70,000
graduated from the United States. But those numbers are
wildly off the mark. If you exclude the car mechanics and
repairmen—who are all counted as engineers in Chinese and
Indian statistics—the numbers look quite different. Per
capita, it turns out, the United States trains more engineers
than either of the Asian giants.
But America's hidden secret is that most of these engineers
are immigrants. Foreign students and immigrants account for
almost 50 percent of all science researchers in the country.
In 2006 they received 40 percent of all PhDs. By 2010, 75
percent of all science PhDs in this country will be awarded
to foreign students. When these graduates settle in the
country, they create economic opportunity. Half of all Silicon
Valley start-ups have one founder who is an immigrant or first
generation American. The potential for a new burst of American
productivity depends not on our education system or R&D
spending, but on our immigration policies. If these people
are allowed and encouraged to stay, then innovation will
happen here. If they leave, they'll take it with them.
More broadly, this is America's great—and potentially
insurmountable—strength. It remains the most open, flexible
society in the world, able to absorb other people, cultures,
ideas, goods, and services. The country thrives on the
hunger and energy of poor immigrants. Faced with the new
technologies of foreign companies, or growing markets
overseas, it adapts and adjusts. When you compare this
dynamism with the closed and hierarchical nations that
were once superpowers, you sense that the United States
is different and may not fall into the trap of becoming
rich, and fat, and lazy.
American society can adapt to this new world. But can
the American government? Washington has gotten used to
a world in which all roads led to its doorstep. America
has rarely had to worry about benchmarking to the rest
of the world—it was always so far ahead. But the natives
have gotten good at capitalism and the gap is narrowing.
Look at the rise of London. It's now the world's leading
financial center—less because of things that the United
States did badly than those London did well, like improving
regulation and becoming friendlier to foreign capital. Or
take the U.S. health care system, which has become a huge
liability for American companies. U.S. carmakers now employ
more people in Ontario, Canada, than Michigan because in
Canada their health care costs are lower. Twenty years ago,
the United States had the lowest corporate taxes in the
world. Today they are the second-highest. It's not that
ours went up. Those of others went down.
American parochialism is particularly evident in foreign
policy. Economically, as other countries grow, for the
most part the pie expands and everyone wins. But
geopolitics is a struggle for influence: as other
nations become more active internationally, they will
seek greater freedom of action. This necessarily means
that America's unimpeded influence will decline. But if
the world that's being created has more power centers,
nearly all are invested in order, stability and progress.
Rather than narrowly obsessing about our own short-term
interests and interest groups, our chief priority should
be to bring these rising forces into the global system,
to integrate them so that they in turn broaden and deepen
global economic, political, and cultural ties. If China,
India, Russia, Brazil all feel that they have a stake in
the existing global order, there will be less danger of
war, depression, panics, and breakdowns. There will be
lots of problems, crisis, and tensions, but they will
occur against a backdrop of systemic stability. This
benefits them but also us. It's the ultimate win-win.
To bring others into this world, the United States needs
to make its own commitment to the system clear. So far,
America has been able to have it both ways. It is the
global rule-maker but doesn't always play by the rules.
And forget about standards created by others. Only three
countries in the world don't use the metric system—Liberia,
Myanmar, and the United States. For America to continue
to lead the world, we will have to first join it.
Americans—particularly the American government—have not
really understood the rise of the rest. This is one of
the most thrilling stories in history. Billions of people
are escaping from abject poverty. The world will be
enriched and ennobled as they become consumers, producers,
inventors, thinkers, dreamers, and doers. This is all
happening because of American ideas and actions. For 60
years, the United States has pushed countries to open
their markets, free up their politics, and embrace trade
and technology. American diplomats, businessmen, and
intellectuals have urged people in distant lands to be
unafraid of change, to join the advanced world, to learn
the secrets of our success. Yet just as they are beginning
to do so, we are losing faith in such ideas. We have
become suspicious of trade, openness, immigration, and
investment because now it's not Americans going abroad
but foreigners coming to America. Just as the world is
opening up, we are closing down.
Generations from now, when historians write about these
times, they might note that by the turn of the 21st century,
the United States had succeeded in its great, historical
mission—globalizing the world. We don't want them to write
that along the way, we forgot to globalize ourselves.
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