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From: Lesley Groff
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Subject: Fwd: Larry Summers - Foreign Affairs - The Fusion of Civilizations
Date: Wed, 04 May 2016 18:06:21 +0000
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Subject: Larry Summers - Foreign Affairs - The Fusion of Civilizations
Date: Ma 4, 2016 at 2:05:48 PM EDT
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The Fusion of Civilizations
The Case for Global Optimism
Foreign Affairs
May/June 2016 issue
By Kishore Mahbubani and Lawrence H. Summers
The mood of much of the world is grim these days. Turmoil in the Middle
East, causing hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions of refugees;
random terrorist attacks across the globe; geopolitical tensions in eastern
Europe and Asia; the end of the commodity supercycle; slowing growth in
China; and economic stagnation in many countries-all have combined to
feed a deep pessimism about the present and, worse, the future.
Historians looking back on this age from the vantage point of later
generations, however, are likely to be puzzled by the widespread
contemporary feelings of gloom and doom. By most objective measures of
human well-being, the past three decades have been the best in history.
More and more people in more and more places are enjoying better lives
than ever before. Nor is this an accident-because despite Samuel
Huntington's foreboding, what has occurred over recent generations is not
a clash of civilizations but a fusion of civilizations.
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To put it simply, the great world civilizations, which used to have detached
and separate identities, now have increasingly overlapping areas of
commonality. Most people around the world now have the same
aspirations as the Western middle classes: they want their children to get
good educations, land good jobs, and live happy, productive lives as
members of stable, peaceful communities. Instead of feeling depressed, the
West should be celebrating its phenomenal success at injecting the key
elements of its worldview into other great civilizations.
The march of reason, triggered in the West by the Enlightenment, is
spreading globally, leading to the emergence of pragmatic problem-solving
cultures in every region and making it possible to envisage the emergence
of a stable and sustainable rules-based order. There is every reason to
believe, moreover, that the next few decades can be even better for
humanity than the last few-so long as the West does not lose confidence in
its core values and retreat from global engagement. The greatest danger of
the current pessimism, therefore, is that it might become a self-fulfilling
prophecy, leading to fear and withdrawal rather than attempts to
reinvigorate the existing global system.
The origins of the contemporary era lie in the West's transformation
during the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, and the Industrial Revolution.
No other civilization can take credit for giving birth to modernity. This was
not done with some benign intent to uplift humanity in general; there were
many problems along the way, and the explosion of Western power across
the globe had some terrible consequences for other cultures and regions.
Yet the ultimate result was the diffusion of a modern outlook that relies on
science and rationality to solve problems, much to the ultimate benefit of
the planet's population.
As recently as half a century ago, for example, there was a global clash of
economic ideologies. Nikita Khrushchev, the former leader of the Soviet
Union, could claim that the state was better at delivering basic goods to
citizens than free markets were, but today such a view would be laughed at.
The market economy has made Chinese and Indian workers today far
more productive than they were under Mao Zedong or Jawaharlal Nehru,
India's first prime minister. Societies now accept the simple fact that
workers need material incentives to be productive, which has led to
increased dignity and self-worth. The vast majority of humanity is literate,
is at least somewhat mobile, and has access to the world's store of existing
knowledge. Around half of the adults in the world own a smartphone, and
there are now more connected mobile devices in total than there are
people on the planet.
The spread of science and technology, meanwhile, has also improved
human dignity and well-being. Most people used to experience lives that
were nasty, brutish, and short. Today, life expectancy has increased by
leaps and bounds virtually everywhere. Infant and maternal mortality have
dropped sharply, thanks in part to the spread of clear hygiene standards
and the construction of modern hospitals. According to the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation, as recently as 1988, polio was rampant in 125 countries;
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today that number is down to two. Aside from among the Taliban and a
few pockets of upscale communities in the United States, the virtues of
vaccines are accepted by all, part of a general consensus on the virtues of
Western science and technology.
And reason is replacing superstition more generally. People around the
world now routinely do basic cost-benefit analyses when looking for
solutions to problems, leading to a gradual improvement in outcomes
everywhere, from agriculture and construction to social and political life.
This helps explain the dramatic long-term decline in the rates of most
kinds of conflict and violence that the Harvard scholar Steven Pinker has
documented.
After slavery and imprisonment, the most degrading condition a human
being can experience is poverty. In 2000, UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan announced as one of the ambitious Millennium Development Goals
halving extreme global poverty by 2015. That goal was far exceeded, and
the U.S. National Intelligence Council has predicted that extreme poverty
will be reduced even further by 2030-which would constitute one of the
most remarkable developments in human history. The global middle class,
meanwhile, is projected to rise from 1.8 billion in 2009 to 3.2 billion in
2020 and 4.9 billion in 2030. The world's infant mortality rate decreased
from an estimated 63 deaths per 1,000 live births in 1990 to 32 in 2015.
This translates into more than four million fewer infant deaths each year.
Instead of optimism based on this recent progress, however, these days in
the West, one more often encounters pessimism related to three current
challenges: turbulence in the Islamic world, the rise of China, and intra-
Western economic and political sclerosis. But the pessimism is
unwarranted, because none of these three challenges is insurmountable.
MODERNIZING MUSLIMS
The Islamic world, from Morocco to Indonesia, comprises 1.6 billion
citizens-more than one in five people on the planet. The vast majority of
them share the common global aspirations to modernize their societies,
achieve middle-class living standards, and lead peaceful, productive, and
fulfilling lives.
Contrary to what some assert, Islam is fully compatible with
modernization. When Malaysia built the Petronas Towers and Dubai built
Bud Khalifa, they were not just erecting physical structures but also
sending a metaphysical message: we want to be part of the modern world
in all dimensions. Many Islamic societies have educated their women. In
Malaysian universities, the women outnumber the men 65 percent to 35
percent. Even some Islamic countries that were initially reluctant to
embrace modernization have begun to do so. For example, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates now feature satellite campuses of
major Western universities. One reason for the shift is that the experience
of other regions, such as Asia, has shown that modernization does not
simply equal westernization-that it is possible to pursue, say, economic
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and social development while still retaining distinctive cultural
characteristics.
It is true that a certain number of young Muslims will continue to choose
rebellion against the modern world rather than integration into it, joining
radical Islamist groups and trying to wreak havoc where they can. About
30,000 Muslim fighters from all over the world, including the West, have
joined the Islamic State (also known as ISIS). But however much they
constitute a major global security problem, they are dwarfed by, say, the
200 million nonradical Muslims who live peacefully in Indonesia alone.
Indonesia has elected two consecutive leaders committed to integrating
the country into the modem world, and its largest Muslim organization,
the so-million-plus-member Nandlatul Ulama, has publicly challenged
ISIS' actions and ideology.
The real challenge, therefore, is not the Islamic world per se but figuring
out how to bolster the pro-modernization trends in that world while
containing the radical trend. In retrospect, it was a mistake for the West to
have remained silent when Saudi funding dramatically increased the
number of radical madrasahs around the world. A comparable investment
today in building a good modem school next to each radical one would
create a contest for legitimacy that would likely spread Enlightenment
values far and wide. Such a program could be undertaken by the UN
agencies UNESCO and UNICEF at relatively modest cost, and it is only one
of many possible lines of advance in attacking the problem.
CHALLENGING CHINESE
The second great challenge many worry about is the rise of China. China's
success, however, can also be seen as the ultimate triumph of the West.
The emperor Qianlong famously wrote to Great Britain's King George III
in 1793 saying, "Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific
abundance and lacks no product within its own borders. There [is]
therefore no need to import the manufactures of outside barbarians in
exchange for our own produce." Two centuries later, the Chinese
understand that absorbing Western modernity into their society has been
crucial to their country's reemergence. It has led to rapid economic growth,
new and gleaming infrastructure, triumphs in space exploration, the
spectacular 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, and much more.
Even as Chinese society has accepted modernity with great enthusiasm,
however, it has not abandoned its Chinese cultural roots. The Chinese look
at their modern Chinese civilization and emphasize its Chineseness, seeing
no contradiction. Indeed, China is now experiencing its own cultural
renaissance, fueled by its new affluence.
The duality of the Chinese story is reflected in the West's schizophrenic
response to it. The Nixon administration eagerly sought better relations
with China under Mao, and when Deng Xiaoping doubled down by
opening up the country, the West applauded the change. The United States
generously accepted Chinese products into its markets, allowed massive
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trade surpluses, welcomed China into the World Trade Organization in
2001, and kept global sea-lanes open so that China could trade freely. All
of this enabled China to emerge as the world's number one trading power
by 2013. The United States also generously allowed more than a million
Chinese students to study in its universities.
Yet the rise of China has also led to deep fears. China continues to be run
by a communist party that has no desire to embrace liberal democracy.
China has displayed a belligerent side in some of its dealings with Japan
and some members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations over
territorial disputes in the East China and South China Seas. The possibility
of an aggressive, militaristic China cannot be ruled out.
But we have come a vast distance since the days when Mao openly talked
about the possibility of winning a nuclear war, and Chinese history
suggests that Beijing will ultimately prefer to join, rather than replace or
reject, the current rules-based order that the West has created. As the
world's number one trading power, China has the most to lose from a
breakdown of the global economic system. Historically, moreover, what
the Chinese have feared most is luan (chaos). This might lead to heavy-
handed efforts to preserve order domestically, but it should lead Beijing to
support a rules-based order at the global level as well. Undoubtedly, as
China grows more powerful, it will become more assertive. This has
happened. But since China needs a few more decades of peace to complete
its modernization, it has strong reasons to restrain itself militarily and
avoid a conflict.
Chinese society will never become a replica of Western society. China's
own culture is too rich to be absorbed into any other cultural universe. Yet
a modernizing China will feature overlapping aspirations in many areas,
as, for example, with the rapid spread of Western classical music. In 2008,
36 million Chinese children were studying the piano (six times the number
of U.S. children doing so), and another 5o million were studying the violin.
Some Chinese cities can fill the halls of 15 opera houses in one evening.
A modern China with thriving Western classical orchestras and Western-
style universities provides a powerful demonstration of the fusion of
civilizations. Western statesmen should allow this dynamic to gain
momentum while remaining patient on other areas of change, such as in
the political realm. China's development will not necessarily be linear, but
in the long run, it should continue in a positive direction.
PESSIMISTIC POPULISTS
The third challenge today is a widespread loss of confidence in the West
about its own systems and future potential. Sluggish growth across the
developed world, stagnant incomes for much of the population, rising
economic inequality, political gridlock, and the emergence of populist
insurgencies on both sides of the political spectrum have fueled a
widespread sense that Western models of governance and economic
management are floundering.
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Many of these problems are real and important. But they are not beyond
the capacity of determined leadership to solve, nor do they represent
fundamental weaknesses of the Western model. So the pessimism strikes
us as dramatically overdone, like previous bouts of declinism and worry
that the West's best days were past. The greatest danger, in fact, is that the
widespread pessimism will become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Gloomy
Western policymakers and publics are more likely to see threats than
opportunities and to turn away from the world rather than continue to lead
it successfully.
This is notable in the rising opposition, for example, to the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, a major trade deal that would help extend and deepen the
liberal order across a broad swath of the globe. It is evident in the
increasing suspicion of immigrants and refugees and in the growing
support for closing borders. And it can be seen in the fraying and potential
unraveling of international institutions such as the European Union,
formerly a model of progressive international integration.
It would be a terrible shame if the West walked away from the very
international order that it created after World War II and that has
facilitated so much security, prosperity, and development over the
decades. Instead, it should try to reinvigorate that order, with three moves
in particular: working with China and India, bolstering international rules,
and accentuating the positive global trends that get lost in all the hysteria
about the negative ones.
Why China and India? Because they have the largest populations and
economies in the developing world, are led by strong, reform-minded
leaders, and are approaching the future with dynamism, optimism, and
hope. Both understand that they need to take on greater responsibilities in
confronting global problems, and as last fall's Paris climate agreement
demonstrates, they are already starting to do so.
Although China's rise has been one of the universally acknowledged
wonders of the age, India's recent rise has been impressive as well, as
India, too, has embraced modernization, globalization, and Enlightenment
rationalism. Along the way, India has maintained the world's largest
democracy, successfully accommodated an amazingly diverse cultural and
demographic mosaic, and kept its head and its values even under repeated
terrorist attacks.
Although both are Asian powers, they differ so much that developing the
capacity to work closely with both, and learning from each, would be a
major step forward in mastering the management of a truly global order.
The rapid spread of Western-style universities and orchestras in China will
provide new bridges between China and the West. The exceptionally
successful ethnic Indian community in the United States will provide
bridges with India. And all this cooperation will accentuate the process of
civilizational fusion.
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In contrast to China and India, Russia has held back from thoroughly
embracing modernity, even though the Soviet Union started modernizing
before China and India. Russia hesitated to join the World Trade
Organization and has not yet accepted that ungrudging participation in the
current rules-based order can facilitate its own progress. The more Beijing
and New Delhi prosper, however, the more persuasive will be the case for
Moscow to follow their lead.
As it works closely with the major developing powers, the West should also
step up its efforts to construct a robust rules-based world in general. In
2003, former U.S. President Bill Clinton said that Americans should try "to
create a world with rules and partnerships and habits of behavior that we
would like to live in when we're no longer the military, political, economic
superpower in the world." If Clinton's fellow citizens could accept such
advice, the citizens of most other countries would be willing to do the
same. And this might be easier to achieve than many believe.
Much of today's global multilateral architecture was a valuable gift from
the West to the world. Yet the major Western powers have also made sure
that these institutions have never grown strong enough or independent
enough to make real trouble for their creators. UN secretary-generals have
been creatures of the permanent members of the Security Council, the
leaders of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund have been
drawn exclusively from the United States and Europe, and dominance in
these financial institutions has occasionally been exploited to achieve
extra-financial goals. These policies should be reconsidered, for the
legitimacy of the system depends on the perception that its rules are
developed by and applied fairly and equally to all, rather than that they
cater to the narrow interests of a few. Picking strong leaders for the major
international institutions and keeping those institutions' operations from
being undermined or politicized would be a major step forward.
Western policymakers, finally, should work to highlight the good things
that are happening around the world rather than harp on the bad things.
Hundreds of millions of people have emerged from poverty in recent
decades even as military conflicts have decreased. The convergence of
global aspirations means that a vast majority of countries want to see
evolution trump revolution in the reshaping of the global architecture. The
appearance of pressing transnational problems should drive a convergence
of interests toward cooperation in finding common solutions. And the
presence of large, well-educated middle classes in countries around the
globe will help keep governments on the right track.
There is every reason to be confident that the condition of the world will
continue to improve as pragmatism and the use of reason become
universal. Western universities have been a crucial driver of this trend. It is
not just that their curricula have been copied around the world; the entire
ecosystem of a modern research university is being replicated, and it is the
graduates of these Western-style universities who have in turn introduced
modern methods into education, public health, economic management,
and public policy more generally. Global management consulting firms
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have also contributed to progress, spreading best practices and good ideas
from the West to "the rest," and increasingly from the rest back to the
West. As a result, even formerly desperate and dysfunctional countries,
such as Bangladesh and Ethiopia, are now confidently entering the modern
universe.
In short, despite the daily headlines that scream doom and gloom, the
world is actually coming together, not falling apart. So far, the fusion of
civilizations has been driven primarily by the injection of Western DNA
into other civilizations. Over time, the flow of culture and ideas is likely to
go in both directions. This has already happened in cuisine, where global
influences have thoroughly penetrated Western kitchens, and something
similar should happen across cultural sectors.
There will be challenges. There could even be major setbacks. The fusion of
civilizations and the social and economic changes associated with it can
seem threatening to some, creating opportunities for demagogues to
exploit popular fears, even in the heart of the advanced industrial world.
But increasingly open and enlightened societies are likely to avoid this
danger. In the twenty-first century, the world will be governed more by the
authority of ideas than by the idea of authority. In short, the progressive
direction of human history, which has lifted the human condition to
heights never seen before, is set to continue.
F Follow Larry on Twitter
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Lawrence H. Summers, 79 JFK Street #8, Cambridge, MA 02138
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| Filename | EFTA00325882.pdf |
| File Size | 687.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 22,196 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T16:01:22.648562 |