[size=0.9em]Globalisation may soon accelerate again – time to get domestic policies right
[size=0.9em]Richard Baldwin, Vesa Vihriälä 19 December 2017
[size=0.9em]Despite the setbacks globalisation has faced in recent years from reactionary politics, the advent of artificial intelligence and robotisation are set to ensure its continuation. Domestic policy must therefore be designed in such a way as to reap the rewards of globalisation while avoiding its pitfalls. This column uses the case of Finland to show how this can be done. Finland has grown faster than its peers over two waves of globalisation, despite enduring substantial setbacks. In both its successes and challenges, it is an important example of the need for deliberate policies to prepare for future disruptions.
Globalisation has been encountering headwinds in many developed countries for several years. The perception that globalisation does not benefit but rather harms ordinary people has contributed to major political upheavals, such as Brexit and the election of Donald Trump as US president (Rodrik 2017, Guiso et al. 2017).
These are understandable reactions, but misguided all the same. First, the technological forces that drive globalisation cannot be halted but may in fact soon make further leaps – triggered by artificial intelligence and ‘robotisation’ – that could pose a major challenge to existing economic structures. Second, as in the past, policy will determine how well new opportunities can be seized and the downsides handled.
Globalisation always means more opportunities for a nation’s most competitive firms and more competition for its least competitive ones, and new artificial intelligence technologies are likely to amplify this. Trying to reverse these changes is a fool’s errand. The right solution lies in implementing the right complementary domestic policies to help distribute the gains and pains of progress.
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