Pandora
and her box
Xenophobia,
anti-immigration sentiment, animosity for international institutions
Many who
observed the Brexit decision consider Pandora’s box now to be open. Was the
Brexit ballot box indeed Pandora’s box? Were the Brexit decision and the “Trump
phenomenon” flares of erupting distrust and frustration with the establishment,
anti-immigrant sentiments, xenophobia, animosity toward international
institutions, and isolationism, as many have noted?
The world
has prospered by widening markets, but not without costs. The fruits of
prosperity were not distributed equally, but rather required sacrifice and
contributed to inequality. Advanced industries in Europe and North America were
the winners; they reaped the most benefit from globalization, while producing
many domestic losers.
Globalized
corporations and capital benefited greatly because they were able to accumulate
vast amounts of wealth through the surge in new opportunities and profits,
while middle to low income laborers suffered from falling wages and
depreciating assets. The change not only affected the economy but also the
international political order.
Beneath
the Brexit decision lies nostalgia for the British Empire and wounded pride
from being pushed off by Germany and France. Beneath the Trump phenomenon is
the fall of the US after the 2008 financial crisis and the fear of a rising
China. Trump’s “America First” and Brexit’s “Britain First” illustrate that the
failures within one’s borders are being attributed to those outside borders.
Remnants of hegemony instigate aggressive foreign policies; fatigue with
international cooperation abets isolationism; and antagonism toward an open
economy and immigration spurs xenophobia. Isolationism is able to cohabit with
confrontation.
The
reactions and assessments of South Koreans toward the Trump phenomenon and the
Brexit decision are diverse and ideologically divided. Some see the Trump
phenomenon simply as an eccentric individual, or as an electoral strategy,
while others see it as full-scale resistance against the established political-economic
order that could affect the rest of the world.
Some see
the Brexit decision as a one-time thing, that it is just British laborers
“kicking” their government, while others see it as a rupture in the neo-liberal
order. The world is heading towards closed nationalism: exaggerating security
threats and crying out for an arms race.
Ivan
Krastev of the Centre for Liberal Strategies in Bulgaria argues that the Brexit
decision is reversing the flows brought about by German reunification, and is even
a starting point for dissolving the cooperation and integration that Europe has
pursued since 1945. But it is in Northeast Asia where troubles are heating up
from deep below. The region is facing another era of schism and confrontation
without being able to resolve divisions and the Cold War system.
Neo-nationalism and the arms race are fiercer in Northeast Asia than in any
other region in the world.
All of
the region’s leaders – President Barack Obama, President Xi Jinping, Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, President Vladimir Putin, Chairman Kim Jong-un and
President Park Geun-hye – are relying on security populism to hold onto
domestic power more firmly.
South
Koreans mostly focus on the security implications of the Trump phenomenon.
Trump advocates an isolationist foreign policy while boasting he will rebuild
the US military, tguaranteeing that it will have no competitors. Moreover, he
says he would make US allies, including South Korea, take a larger part in
shared defense expenditures at the risk of the US pulling out.
Conservatives
in South Korea argue in fear that a new president alone won’t be able to
achieve any such fundamental change, because the US is a country with firm rule
of law and an institutionalized system. They advocate, with their fingers crossed,
that the South Korea-US alliance will not suffer and that pressures for a
higher burden of defense expenditures or protectionist trade policies can be
alleviated if South Korea works to persuade the US.
Progressives
agree on their hatred of the far-right tendencies of Trump. Some among them,
however, argue that it will be a long time before we can correct the unbalanced
South Korea-US relationship, or before we can better relations between the two
Koreas if Democrats continue to remain in power. They argue that Trump could be
a better bet in terms of changes in these areas because he, at least, talks of
pulling US troops out of South Korea and of negotiating directly with Kim
Jong-un.
The
Brexit decision is mostly discussed in terms of its economic repercussions on
South Korea. It is clearly unfavorable for South Korea because its economy
depends on trade. The decision will destabilize foreign currency markets and
the stock market for South Korea in the short run. In the long run, South
Korean exports would suffer, which would in turn weaken its already faltering
economy.
Many
agree on these as the factual effects of Brexit, but their interpretation of
these effects and their prescriptions for them differ radically among
ideological positions. Progressives read the Brexit decision as a revolt
against neo-liberal globalization and the establishment within Britain, the
solution being welfare and economic democratization in order to reduce
inequality.
On the
other hand, the conservative elites see it as in line with economic crisis,
advocating that we should rally behind the government. President Park’s stance
is typical in this sense, as when she said that “countries collapsed because of
those who instigate internal discord,” soon after the Brexit decision.
CNN
called the Brexit vote the UK’s “Donald Trump moment.” What moment is South
Korea going through, and what will it go through? People’s rage against
inequality can be easy prey for extreme right populism; a version of the Brexit
decision or the Trump phenomenon might just occur in South Korea. The extreme
right’s fast rise to power is not visible because the extreme right has already
been in power for several decades; the people have suffered frustration while,
at the same time, being immune to it.
In a way,
South Korea’s establishment ruling coalition is a cut above, because they used
various tactics to not cross the critical point. Like a pressure cooker which
gradually emits steam to prevent explosion, steam has been removed by employing
security populism, by the sophistry that welfare and growth are opposites, and
by welfare expansion without new taxes. The phrase “Hell Joseon,” referring to
how tough and hellish life in South Korea is, and the “dirt spoon theory,”
where economic status is passed down, as in those born into underprivileged
families, are treated as a storm in a teacup.
It is
difficult to foresee how long such methods will be accepted. Also, after the
Brexit decision, there were hot debates on the Internet claiming the need to
abolish multicultural policies in South Korea before it is too late. These
people responded similarly when Trump’s blunt, racially discriminatory remarks
on migrants and Muslims were broadcast.
There is
also high potential for South Korea to deceive people with a false solution to
polarization, as in isolationism and racial discrimination. South Korea is
already turning into a high-conflict society, with issues such as xenophobia,
generational discord and gender conflicts.
South
Korea’s diplomatic position is more difficult than ever. Conflict between the
US and China and the increasing security dilemma within Northeast Asia are
difficult challenges. The US is strengthening its alliance network to contain
a rising China, while China is resisting this. Despite heightening US-China
conflict, considering their high mutual dependency, it is surely unlikely to
lead to military collision.
However,
with continuing mutual distrust, it is also challenging to reach cooperation
and coexistence, which presumes concessions between the two. It is also
difficult to exclude collision when China’s acquisitive expansion on issues of
regional leadership and the US’s aggressive defense of its existing
leadership role magnifies the conflict between the two.
In
particular, the key is to establish borders around each country’s sphere of
influence. Such issues include the Korean Peninsula, Cross-Strait relations
between China and Taiwan, and the disputes in the South China Sea.
Among
these flash points, the Korean Peninsula may become the most intense one
between the US and China. South Korea needs to choose whether to stand on the
fault lines and strengthen its position, or to mitigate the confrontation at
the border. The latter is desirable for South Korea’s national interests and
regional peace, but sadly, the situation is moving in the opposite direction.
Settling
hostile relations is essential, but North Korea’s nuclear development and South
Korea’s hardline policy towards North Korea are becoming a pretext for US-China
conflicts. Thee recent decision by South Korea and the US to deploy the
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) may become a decisive inflection
point deepening the fault lines within Northeast Asia.
China,
with Russia, stands at odds with the US, which is using North Korea’s nuclear
development as an excuse to deploy a missile defense system, and also with
South Korea, which is faithfully carrying out that plan. Such a choice can push
the Korean Peninsula into a so-called crossfire of military deployment that is
strengthening among the US, China and Russia.
Internal
inequality needs to be solved through active welfare and openness. However, the
state has lost its means to implement such methods. Worsening global inequality
needs to be resolved through cooperation and integration, but global governance
has encountered a crisis. The reason that capitalism was maintained despite its
many weaknesses is because the state, although incomplete, controlled the
market’s indiscreet accumulation of private interests by using public
authority, provided public goods where private capital fails to serve, and
conducted redistribution through taxation and welfare.
However,
the expansion of neo-liberalism premised on reducing state intervention
inevitably led to the reduction of the public nature of the state, and the
state in turn was deprived of the will and means to take care of the losers in
the market. Capital and markets will not improve themselves under current structuralized
inequality, and the state operates in support of them rather than controlling
them.
The
“trilemma” of globalization, nation, and democracy as described by Professor
Dani Rodrik of Harvard University is deepening. The extreme right solution is malicious,
but the diagnosis and solution from the progressive side is the result of
misinterpretation and recycling. Although the socialist resolution to income
inequality was completely defeated numerous times by neo-liberalism, it is not
self-correcting.
While it
is true that the Brexit decision and the Trump phenomenon are the backlash to
neo-liberalism, they also do not represent progressivism. The stratum that is
expressing these complaints is actually not at all progressive. They are rather
vulnerable to the extreme right forces that are suggesting incorrect solutions.
Also, they do not have the composure to believe the progressive promises to
solve complaints on reality.
Despite
the gloomy forecast, time and opportunity still exist. Liberty is a value to be
defended for the sake of our future, even as the tyranny of neo-liberalism
should be fought against. By recovering the public nature of the state, we
should cope with widening inequality and pursue coexistence and peace through
foreign policy.
We should
prevent the fault lines in Northeast Asia from becoming permanent by improving
the relationship between the two Koreas. There can be hope if a Korean
Peninsula currently lacking in peace fills that deficit. The hope lying at the
bottom of Pandora’s box is an alternative that is more democratic, integrated
and peaceful. Now more than ever, leadership with such a critical mind and
zeitgeist is required.
The views
expressed here are those of the author, Joonhyung
Kim, Professor of International and Area Studies, Handong Global
University.
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