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What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter?. Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42:3-32. AZ State University. Oxford University. Do IOs matter?. Plan.
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What is the role of international organizations and do they really matter? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42:3-32. AZ State University Oxford University
Plan • Some descriptive facts about IOs • A&S Take-away point • Plus: PD & coordination • Other perspectives • Realism, Constructivism, (Principal-Agent/Bureaucratic) • My perspective: Self-Interest • Motives (e.g., laundering dirty politics)
Dramatic action • United Nations Security Council (UNSC): • sanctions & military action – Iran, Iraq (1991 v. 2003?), Libya • International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) • inspectors in North Korea • United Nations (UN) • peacekeepers in the Middle East • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) • in Bosnia • The Uruguay Round the World Trade Organization (WTO) & the dispute settlement mechanism
Ongoing action • Global health policy (the WHO) • Development (the World Bank) • Monetary policy (the International Monetary Fund) • EXTERNALITIES? (Implicit action?) • Participation reduces the chances of war among members • Participation increases the chances of democracy
Various sizes • From small: • Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) - $2 million budget (pays for their annual meeting?) • To big: • European Union (EU) • verging on a sovereign state (GDP of 15-19 trillion $) • World Bank • >10,000 employees from 160 countries (2/3 in Washington) • IMF • Aug. 2008: $341 billion moving to nearly $1 trillion post-GFC
Specialized agencies(look up on your own): • ILO • http://www.ilo.org/global/What_we_do/lang--en/index.htm • ICAO • http://www.icao.int/icao/en/howworks.htm • FAO • http://www.fao.org/about/about-fao/en/ • Others: • UNEP • http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=43 • EBRD • http://www.ebrd.com/about/index.htm
AZ State University Oxford University The main take-away point? Abbot, Kenneth and Duncan Snidal. 1998. Why States Act through Formal Organizations. Journal of Conflict Resolution 42:3-32. http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Why+States+Act+through+Formal+Organizations&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&hl=en&tab=ws
IOs allow for: • CENTRALIZATION • An organizational structure & administrative apparatus managing collective activities • May allow for immediate action (UN Security Council) • Or for specialization (OECD has >200 working groups) • Governance may have flexible design (IMF voting structure) or be rigid (UN Security Council) • INDEPENDENCE • The ability/authority to act with a degree of autonomy within defined spheres
Rational choice perspective: • Self-Interest: • LEADERS create/use IOs when benefits of cooperation outweigh (sovereignty) costs • IOs • produce collective goods in PD settings • solve coordination problems (“battle of the sexes”)
PD settings? • Prisoner’s dilemma • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ED9gaAb2BEw&feature=related • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3Uos2fzIJ0
Prisoner’s Dilemma: • A non-cooperative, non-zero-sum game. • Mixed game of cooperation & conflict • Individual rationality brings about collective irrationality.
The same situation can occur whenever "collective action" is required. • The collective action problem is also called the "n-person prisoner’s dilemma." • Also called the "free rider problem." • "Tragedy of the commons." • All have similar logics and a similar result: • Individually rational action leads to collectively suboptimal results.
Is cooperation ever possible in Prisoner’s Dilemma? • Yes • In repeated settings • Axelrod, Robert M. 1984. The Evolution of Cooperation. New York: Basic Books.
In the repeated setting, there are multiple equilibria: (1) “Defect” – “Defect” (2) Tit-for-Tat “Cooperate” – “Cooperate”
“Battle of the sexes” coordination game:(This one is NOT a “prisoner’s dilemma”)
IOs facilitate cooperation by coordinating states on superior equilibria/outcomes. • And they also lower the transaction costs of doing so.
Realist theory • Anarchy rules international relations • States do not cede authority • IOs thus lack strong enforcement capacities • They are mere reflections of national interests/power • They do not constrain powerful states • Does realism = rational choice? • Realism focuses on state interests - ignores microfoundations (leader incentives, domestic politics)
Constructivist theory • Anarchy is what you make of it! • Where do ideas and preferences come from? • Focus on norms, beliefs, knowledge, and (shared) understandings International ideas IOs IOs International ideas • Vital for the understanding of major concepts such as legitimacy and norms
Abbot & Snidal: States use IOs to… • Reduce transaction costs • Create information, ideas, norms, and expectations • Carry out and encourage specific activities • Legitimate or delegitimate particular ideas and practices • Enhance their capacities and power
Principal-Agent framework • IOs are thus "agents" • Their (biggest) members are the "principals" • Agency slack? • "bureaucratic" perspective
The principal-agent problem • The agent works for the principal • The agent has private information • The principal only observes an outcome • Must decide to reelect/pay/rehire/keep the agent • If standards are too low, the agent “shirks” • If standards are too high, the agent gives up • We need a Goldilocks solution – set standards “just right.” • We may have to accept some an “information rent” • Either pay extra or accept agency slack (corruption?)
If reelection criteria are too high, the government will not supply effort when exogenous conditions are bad. • If reelection criteria are too low, the government will not supply effort when conditions are good. • What should you do? • Intuition: It depends on the probability of good/bad conditions & on the difference in outcomes when conditions are good/bad…
Solution? • TRANSPARENCY?
Public choice/Bureaucratic theory • IOs are like any bureaucracy • Allow governments to reward people with cushy jobs • The bureaucracy is essentially unaccountable • Seek to maximize their budgets • Look for things to do
What do IOs do for their members? • Pooling resources • (IMF/World Bank, World Health Organization) - share costs, economies of scale • Direct joint action • military (NATO), financial (IMF), dispute resolution (WTO) • But why would states want an IO to do these things?... • Enforcement? • Neutrality? • Community representative? • Laundering?
Enforcement? • The problem of endogeneity • 100% Compliance may mean the IO is doing *nothing* • Be careful what conclusions we draw from observations • Compliance is meaningful only if the state takes action it would not take in the absence of the IO • IMF/World Bank CONDITIONALITY
Neutrality? • Example • Blue helmets: • Providing information • http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/jrv24/IMFforecasts.html • Collecting information • http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/jrv24/transparency.html
Community representative? • Legitimacy • Articulate global (regional) norms?
LAUNDERING? • Allow states to take (collective) action without taking direct responsibility (or take responsibility with IO support) • Examples: • The IMF does the dirty work • UN Security Council resolutions - a form of laundering? • When an IO legitimates retaliation, states are not vigilantes but upholders of community norms, values, and institutions • Korean War - The United States cast essentially unilateral action as more legitimate *collective* action by getting UN Security Council approval
Why do we blame International Organizations and use them to lauder our dirty politics? The world deserves harmonious cooperation through global governance • But that’s not what we need right now • Small steps towards cooperation • IO’s can help • And we’ll blame them when things go wrong • Because they can take it • Because they’re not our hero • They’re our silent guardians. Our watchful protectors. • Our dark knights
Answers to today’s question: • IO’s coordinate on superior equilibria & reduce transaction costs • Enable members to: • Enforce norms & international law • Have a neutral community representative • Legitimacy - shared beliefs that coordinate actors regarding what actions should be accepted, tolerated, resisted, or stopped • LAUNDER dirty politics • To these ends IOs are created: CENTRALIZED & INDEPENDENT
Analytical tools • Coordination games & Prisoner’s dilemma • Realist theory • Constructivist theory • My perspective: Interests & Institutions • Interests of LEADERS (Chief executives) • Constraints/opportunities posed by DOMESTIC & INTERNATIONAL Institutions