A Hard Look at the Costs of Peace
• Author(s): Jacques Fontanel & Michael D. Ward
• Published: June 2002
• Pages in paper: 14
Abstract
The United States has emerged as a hegemonic, dominant military power exactly
during the period when its military expenditures have grown least. The end of
the Cold War did indeed deliver a huge dividend to its largest beneficiary, the
United States. During this same period, the US economy has also doubled,
fueled by the rapid increases in productivity brought on by the information
economy. These two stylized facts stand in sharp relief to a 40-year period in
which there was a bipolar balance of power and much more modest economic
growth in industrial as well as developing societies. As beneficial as these changes
are, it must be recognized that they also undermine the political and economic
status quo ante. In this article the authors speculate about the importance of
legitimacy in a global political economy dominated by a single major power. New
organizational forms of conflict management may actually be fostered by such a
disequilibrating state of affairs.
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