By John Ballard
Bill Easterly puts into clear language a nagging thought that has bothered me ever since I heard the term. I'm all in favor of new words and phrases that reflect a changing environment, but the failed state stuff remindes me too much of colonial complaints about natives who need to learn to pull up their socks.
1) �State failure� is leading to confused policy making.
For example, it is causing the military to attempt overly ambitious nation-building and development to approach counter-terrorism, under the unproven assumption that �failed states� produce terrorism.
2) �State failure� has failed to produce any useful academic research in economics.
You would expect a major concept to be the subject of research by economists (as well as by other fields, but I am using economics research as an indicator). While there has been research on state failure, it failed to generate any quality academic publications in economics. A search of the top economics journals reveals that �state failure� (and all related variants like �failed states�) has been mentioned only once EVER. And this article mentions the concept only in passing
3) �State failure� has no coherent definition.
Different sources have included the following:
- �Civil war�
- �infant mortality�
- �declining levels of GDP per capita�
- �inflation�
- �unable to provide basic services�
- �state policies and institutions are weak�
- �corruption�
h) �lack accountability�- �unwilling to adequately assure the provision of security and basic services to significant portions of their populations� (wouldn�t this include the US?)
- �inability to collect taxes�
- �group-based inequality� and environmental decay.�
- �wars and other disasters�
- �citizens vulnerable to a whole range of shocks�
Most of these concepts are clear enough in themselves, and often apply to a large number of countries. But is there any good reason to combine them with arbitrary weights to get some completely unclear concept for a smaller number of countries? �State failure� is like a destructive idea machine that turns individually clear concepts into an aggregate unclear concept.
4) The only possible meaningful definition adds nothing new to our understanding of state behavior, and is not really measurable.
A more narrow definition of �state failure� is: a loss of the monopoly of force, or the inability to control national territory. Unfortunately this is impossible to measure: how do you know when a state has control? The only data I have been able to find that might help comes from the Polity research project that classifies the history of states as democracies or autocracies. It describes �interregnums� that sound like the narrow �state failure� idea:
A �-77? code for the Polity component variables indicates periods of periods of �interregnum,� during which there is a complete collapse of central political authority. This is most likely to occur during periods of internal war.
If interregnums are indeed a good measure, the data show that �state failure� is primarily just an indicator of war. As the data show, the rate of �state failure� in the 20th century spiked in the two World Wars, and then increased again (but not as much) after decolonization, again almost always associated with wars.
Even this measure does not really capture the narrow definition. Many countries were often created as �states� by colonial powers rather than following any natural state-building process in which states gain more and more control of territory. Almost all ex-colonies fail to control national territory after independence, and many still do not do so today � many more than the usual number of �failed states.� (Africa being the most striking example as exposited in the great book by Herbst, States and Power in Africa.)
Hence, if we use the measure described above, than state failure is just synonymous with war, and if we don�t (as we probably shouldn�t), then �state failure� is something more common and harder to measure than the current policy discussion recognizes.
5) �State failure� appeared for political reasons.
The real genesis of the �state failure� concept was a CIA State Failure Task Force in the early 1990s. Their 1995 first report said state failure is �a new term for a type of serious political crisis exemplified by recent events in Somalia, Bosnia, Liberia, and Afghanistan.� All four involved civil war, confirming the above point that �state failure� often just measures �war.� And we have just seen from the data (and common sense about decolonization) that either the claim of �newness� is false, or we are still not sure what �state failure� means.
Nevertheless, �state failure� became a hot idea in policy circles. If we use the number of articles in Foreign Affairs mentioning �state failure� or variants, then it first appeared around the same time as the CIA task force, and then really took off after 9/11.
One can only speculate about the political motives for inventing an incoherent concept like �state failure.� It gave Western states (most notably the US superpower) much more flexibility to intervene where they wanted to (for other reasons): you don�t have to respect state sovereignty if there is no state. After the end of the Cold War, there was less hesitation to intervene because of the disappearance of the threat of Soviet retaliation. �State failure� was even more useful as justification for the US to operate with a free hand internationally in the �War on Terror� after 9/11.
These political motives are perfectly understandable, but they don�t justify shoddy analysis using such an undefinable concept.
It�s time to declare �failed state� a �failed concept.�
Indeed and Amen and Go-ahead-on.
Plenty of scholarly references and charts at the link.
Dr. Easterly can politely say one can only speculate about the political motives for inventing an incoherent concept like "state failure" but I'm not bound to that much courtesy. I call it what it is: another neocon stain getting wiped off the floor. Our grandchildren will be cleaning up the mess left behind by the last two or three decades. That is, if they don't turn to fascism first.
Oh yeah now everyone wants to drop the concept or start to question it as it now, I think according to various item 3 definitions clearly applies to the USA. No fair, eh
ReplyDeleteTotally disagree. Moreover, most of the objections listed here to the term are themselves politically motivated, except in two cases, which are more methodological in nature.
ReplyDelete"but the failed state stuff remindes me too much of colonial complaints about natives who need to learn to pull up their socks."
That's really your own baggage. Somalia and Congo are not about socks or imperial racism but a near zero level of effective governance. Talking our way around problems to avoid aggravating left academic fetishes does not produce policy solutions.
"A search of the top economics journals reveals that �state failure� (and all related variants like �failed states�) has been mentioned only once EVER."
So what? Economics would only be one angle of analysis of failed states and not the one of the primary academic fields interested in failed states as a phenomenon. I'm sure archaeology journals have little to say as well.
�State failure� has no coherent definition....If interregnums are indeed a good measure, the data show that �state failure� is primarily just an indicator of war."
There can't be multiple causation of state failure? WTF? What planet is Mr. Easterly sending his signals to the mothership from ?
This is why quants should never be left to themselves to play with policy unsurpervised. They ask first what is measurable rather than what is worth measuring and proceed from a fractionated and isolated aspect to skew further and further way from any reality that is messy or contains ambiguities, complex social problems or contradictions. This kind of quant excess explains why IR and Poli Sci are becoming near damn useless to policy makers on either side of the political aisle.
Quants make great tools which I agree need to be used BUT these tools need to be employed in partnership with Qual experts who understand the entire context, as squishy, soft and muddy as the bigger picture can be at times.
Don't hold back, Mark. Tell us how you really feel.
ReplyDeleteI guess that pulling up their socks trope is personal baggage, but I'm not ready to toss Easterly's arguments aside as quickly. I get the criticisms but I would feel better if the concept of "governance" was less about making the trains run on time and more about seeking ways to avert or ameliorate international tragedies, academic fetish or not.
I'm in favor of not oversimplifying complex issues, but as long as corporate profits remain the metric for what passes for good governance the economists, like it or not, hold the cards.
And Easterly's CV speaks for itself.
(I hold your blog and opinions in high esteem. Hope this little tiff leaves no lasting marks.)
LOL! Sorry if I came off a little too intense with my previous comment. My issue was not with you Hootsbuddy or even Easterly personally but the way he framed his argument.
ReplyDeleteMy ire with Easterly is not that he is unqualified but that his specialized academic lens should not be the only one used in analysis as failed states bottom out for different reasons. War is definitely one of them, no argument, but many states remain functional with multiple insurgencies burning for decades, India has many of them, for example while Zimbabwe has none ( the last time I checked, at any rate). Analysis has to be a multidisciplinary approach.
"Failed states" are fuzzily defined, conceded, but there are a handful of countries where the government is nonexistent - or without effective writ beyond the capital.
The failed state concept correctly describes the true account of events is Haiti today. Before the massive earthquake, every action on your list was true. The task of critical analysis to see beyond a changing environment is to correctly use language that describes the true state of events.
ReplyDeleteI see Haiti, along with Somalia, Congo, and Zimbabwe already mentioned, as infected, weeping sores on the body of mankind, but it is misleading to use the word state for these places. When I hear of a "state" my mind immediately goes to a geo-political category with (accurately or not, it doesn't matter) a homogeneous population of people living together in economic and social balance, making ends meet and constructively interacting with the rest of the community of what we call nations.
ReplyDeleteWere the indigenous tribes of American Indians "states"? We call them nations, you know. And where do the many diaporas of mankind fit, not only Jews, but more recently the Hmong, the Iraqis (several millions now scattered all over the world), and the Roma (now in the Soros spotlight)? And I dare not mention the Palestinians.
This misleading use of the word state is what bothers me. If poor governance is the meaning, we should say "failed governments." Easterly is correct when he says this neologism is mainly another subtle but effective way to sell waging war. Something like "regime change" which sounds so much better than attacking and overthrowing whoever is in charge. Or the delicate use of "interests" for "principles" when the two collide.
�Quants make great tools which I agree need to be used BUT these tools need to be employed in partnership with Qual experts who understand the entire context, as squishy, soft and muddy as the bigger picture can be at times.�
ReplyDeleteBut the real conversation between Quants and Quals is in faith and certainty. Quants have faith in numbers; Quals have certainty in numbers. This gap between faith and certainty is not one easily crossed, as religion has certainty and science has faith.
Maybe one way to think of this is: science has faith that the input they are getting is accurate, but has no bias of its outcome; religion has a certainty about the output it has to give, but no bias of its input. Religion will always enforce conformity in its input, base on its output; science will enforce conformity in its output, based on its input. These are dynamically opposed logic centers that are not easily conformed or diversified, and most often settled by war, the judgment rendered by resources or the lack there of.
The Somalia Mission to the UN (since 1945) is represented by H.E. Dr Elmi Ahmed Duale, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Permanent Representative, The Permanent Mission of Zimbabwe to the UN is B.G.Chidyausiku [Lt. Col. Retd] and so on. Doesn�t having these and other potential failed countries with "failed governments" delivering "poor governance" (true state of affairs since they live on aid and charity) in New York mean they are states in the UN?
ReplyDeleteHey Hoot,
ReplyDelete"Were the indigenous tribes of American Indians "states"? We call them nations..."
"State" is a specific kind of government, generally Westphalian, Weberian and institutionally bureaucratic in structure. The North American Indians, except for maybe the Aztec did not have anything resembling a state.
I wouldn't say most of the tribes north of the Rio Grande rose to the population level or political complexity of nations either, though the Algonquin, Cherokee and some of the Northwest Pacific tribal groups were clearly on the way. The Hawaiians though succeeded in forming a monarchical nation-state under Kamaehamaha