What new transatlantic institutions?

What new transatlantic institutions?

What new transatlantic institutions?

External Author(s)
Mark Leonard

Written by Mark Leonard, Charles Grant, 01 April 2005

Russia, the EU and the common neighbourhood

Russia, the EU and the common neighbourhood

Russia, the EU and the common neighbourhood

External Author(s)
Dmitri Trenin

Written by Dmitri Trenin, 02 September 2005

Don't be fooled: Bali was no breakthrough

Don't be fooled: Bali was no breakthrough

Don't be fooled: Bali was no breakthrough

Written by Simon Tilford, 18 December 2007

by Simon Tilford

The United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bali produced as much as it was ever likely to do. There was no breakthrough, contrary to the claims of some that attended the conference. Nobody should read too much into reports that the US administration fears its negotiators gave too much away. This is just news management, an attempt to create the impression that the US moved further than it did. The US gave nothing away. The aim of the US negotiating team in Bali was to prevent any international agreement that might demand the US cut its emissions, despite the fact the country could do this at relatively moderate cost according to its own Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This opposition stems partly from the personal intransigence of President Bush, but also reflects a deep-seated reluctance to allow the country’s freedom of action to be constrained by international agreements. It is another big blow to US soft power in the world.

Of course, on current trends the proposed target of a 25-40 percent cut in developed country emissions by 2020 is nonsense. There is no chance whatsoever of such targets being met unless EU governments get very serious, very quickly about curbing emissions. The construction of new coal-fired power stations would not be compatible with meeting such a target for example, so governments in Germany and the UK would have to scrap plans for a new generation of such plants. Germany would also have to overcome its squeamishness about nuclear power. Energy efficiency standards, for everything from cars to buildings would have to be ratcheted-up very aggressively. Crucially, the EU emissions trading scheme (ETS) would need very tight emissions caps. Only then will businesses be confident that the price of carbon will rise steadily, providing sufficiently strong incentives to invest in low-carbon technologies.

However, notwithstanding question marks over the realism of the 25-40 per cent target, the US position – that targets are meaningless without policies can be put in place at the outset to met those targets – is hugely cynical. It is impossible to agree policies to reduce emissions until governments know which targets their economies have to meet. Similarly, the US knows as well as everyone else that the commitments to curb emissions it wants to see from developing countries will only happen if the developed countries take the lead. It is simply not plausible for the US to turn to China and India and demand they commit to mandatory cuts before it does. Per capita US emissions are at least 4 times Chinese levels and more than 10 times Indian ones. Research from the EPA calculates that the US could cut emissions of greenhouse gases by 60 per cent by 2050 at a cost of just 3.2 per cent of GDP. To put that in perspective, US GDP will rise by nearly 200 per cent over this period (assuming annual real GDP growth of 2.5 per cent.) For the world’s only superpower to rule out such action almost looks like a calculated snub to the rest of the world and will prove a big blow to its moral authority.

However, it is still early days – the timetable for agreeing a replacement for Kyoto stretches into 2009, and hence beyond President Bush’s time in office. Whoever replaces him will have to be more open-minded about international action to challenge climate change, even if only for questions of political expediency. With only 18 months left in office Bush can afford to dismiss the damage being done to the US’s international standing and influence. The next president will not have such a luxury and, regardless of how seriously he/she takes the threat of climate change, will calculate that the costs of refusing to join the EU in its attempt to orchestrate international action to address climate change will outweigh the perceived costs of signing-up.

The EU can do much to ensure that the costs of US inaction are steep. The best way to put pressure on the next administration is for the EU to persevere and impose big unilateral cuts in its own emissions. This will not impair the competitiveness of the EU or cost it export markets. Indeed, the opposite is much more likely. The US is unwilling to take action, but neither does it want to see the EU building on its lead in energy efficient technologies. In an age of mounting energy scarcity, geo-political tension and ever more environmentally conscious consumers and businesses, aggressive emissions targets by the EU will be positive for Europe’s authority in the world and for its long-term economic prospects. The Chinese and Indians might not be ready to sign up to mandatory caps on their emissions, but they are only too aware of the need to make their development more environmentally sustainable. The EU is well placed to supply the technology. The more successful it is at doing this, the quicker the US will come to its senses.

Simon Tilford is chief economist at the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 18 Dec 2007 at 18:56 by ingulf

Is it in fact true that new coal fires power stations are incompatible with the CO2 targets? According to a lecture I went to, coal is - counterintuitively - the fossil fuel most amenable to sequestration. (http://www.cambridgeenergy.com/event-2006dec01.htm ,the one by Dr Gibbins)
Of course, a new powerstation is an increase in CO2, but it would presumably enable us to take an old non-sequestrating one offline.

China is losing its EU friends

China and the EU

China is losing its EU friends

Written by Katinka Barysch, 29 November 2007

by Katinka Barysch

The EU is getting tough on China. That, at least, is the impression one gets from high-ranking EU officials that arrived for the annual EU-China summit in Beijing this week. Economics is the main reason for Europe’s changing mood. The EU’s trade deficit with China is set to reach €170 billion this year, and European business is losing an estimated €55 million a day because of Chinese red tape, trademark violations and unfair subsidies. The EU’s economic troika – Joaquin Almunia, Jean-Claude Juncker and Jean-Claude Trichet – called on China to let its currency rise against the euro. Commission President Barroso and his trade commissioner, Peter Mandelson, warned that they would no longer be able to withstand rising protectionist pressure in Europe, unless the Chinese made it easier for European companies to sell in their markets.

Will the Chinese be frightened? Maybe they should be. Those industries in the EU that compete directly with Chinese mass manufacturers – think Italian textiles, German light bulbs or Czech consumer electronics – have occasionally lobbied for protection. But European retailers and those industries that rely on cheap Chinese inputs, for example steel, have lobbied against. At the political level, the Chinese could usually rely on Germany, the UK and the Commission to make the case for open markets. However, this may no longer be the case.

The Commission’s patience seems to be wearing thin. Mandelson in October wrote a letter to Barroso that suggested that the EU’s dialogue-based approach to solving economic disputes with China may have run its course.
The British may be instinctive free traders. But British business is unlikely to lobby on China’s behalf. UK companies still sell roughly as much to Denmark and Dubai as they sell to China. On the other hand, China is now Britain’s 5th most important source of imports, with the result that the bilateral trade deficit reached €24 billion in 2006, a third of the UK’s total trade deficit with non-EU countries. Services, where UK companies are world leaders, account for only a tiny fraction of Chinese imports because domestic markets remain heavily protected. A recent survey showed that while globally almost half of company bosses see China as the biggest business opportunity, in the UK the share is only 37 per cent.
Perhaps most worrying for the Chinese is the shifting mood in Berlin, however. Germany alone accounts for around 40 per cent of all EU exports to China, not least because Germany specialises in exactly the kind of machine tools that China needs to build up its industrial sector. Since 2000, Germany’s exports to China have risen threefold. Since the German economy is much more dependent on exports than those of other big EU countries, it has had a strong interest in keeping economic relations with China smooth.

In recent years, however, the rising euro has made German goods expensive outside the eurozone. And German, like other western companies, have suffered from China’s very cavalier attitude towards patents and trade marks. In 2006, German machinery exports to China actually fell. Germany’s trade deficit with China has more than doubled since 2000, to €16 billion in 2006, and it keeps growing. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the share of Germans who see China as an economic threat has jumped by 17 percentage points in just two years, to 55 per cent in 2007 – the biggest public opinion turnaround in any big OECD country.

German awareness of China as a competitor, not only a promising market, will rise further as Chinese industry moves up the value chain. Chinese car output, for example, is growing by 40 per cent a year. Although Chinese cars have a long way to go before they can compete with Volkswagen or BMW, the fact that China now produces more of them than Germany has fuelled some disquiet. As has the fact that China has dethroned Germany as the world’s biggest exporter.

At the same time as economic ties are souring, Germany and China have fallen out politically. The Chinese were very upset when Angela Merkel received the Dalai Lama in her Chancellor’s office in September 2007. Merkel initially said she’d expect Beijing to calm down quickly. It did not. Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck had to cancel a planned trip to Beijing because his counterpart was no longer available. Chinese state-owned companies pulled out of a China-German trade fare. Scheduled dialogues on human rights, the rule of law and foreign policy co-operation were called off.

At the EU summit, Premier Wen Jiabao said that Germany could still be a partner and a friend – provided that Merkel acknowledged publicly that she had made a mistake by seeing the Dalai Lama. The Chancellor is also under growing pressure from German business groups and her SPD partners in the grand coalition. But she is unlikely to budge. In a speech to parliamentarians at home, she insisted that “human rights and the defence of economic interests are two sides of the same coin”.

While they have put relations with Germany on ice, the Chinese have reached out to France. Nicolas Sarkozy grasped the opportunity at a bilateral summit in Beijing on November 25th. As is customary, he came with a group of French business leaders, who signed deals worth around €20 billion (although such ‘summit deals’ have a habit of falling apart afterwards). However, Sarkozy is unlikely to be as friendly to the Chinese as his famously Sinophile predecessor, Jacques Chirac. While he promised strong ties, Sarkozy also admonished Beijing for its currency policy and warned that Europe may slap ‘carbon tariffs’ on Chinese goods unless the Beijing contributed to a post-Kyoto agreement.

Europe will not make a full turn towards protectionism. But there clearly is growing potential for economic friction with China. Beijing’s usual conciliatory language – promising gradual change and open dialogue – may no longer be enough. It may have to offer concrete action on currency policy and economic opening if it wants to win its European friends back.

Katinka Barysch is deputy director of the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 06 Dec 2007 at 03:15 by anonymous

"because of Chinese red tape, trademark violations and unfair subsidies". So, the Chinese steal things, they are bad people because they steal things. Who says that, MPAA and RIAA? That is a funny position, and i guess it is couched in the "you do not respect intellectual property". - As if something immaterial that we cannot either see or touch could be property...

I would rather say that we have a problem with our non-accountability of the patent establishment, not bad people who steal things. That is the elephant in the room no one is willing to talk about, and it has consequences.

What financial and economic risks do we have by intellectual property systems that have long been out of sync with the actual intent of the law. What was the intent? Anyone remember? We also need to remember a distinction in this context. It is the distinction between invention, innovation and incremental change. Over the last 2 decades we have entirely blurred those lines.

The patent system was a social contract, the monopoly right was saying to society that it was economically viable to change the dynamics of fair and free markets, in consideration.. in consideration for a disclosure of something that ultimately advances the cause of science, technology or industry. Today the system is not a social contract in exchange for whatsoever. Go ahead, read _any_ recent granted patent. In practice we have created such a great obfuscation around what we think we are doing and what we think our competitors are doing, that we have mutually assured destruction if anyone ever peel back the layers of the patents to actually sort out who is doing what. That is the elephant.

What if the patents that are being asserted to be stolen or copied or infringed are not actually worth the paper they are printed on, and what if the Chinese using their sovereign rights to actually challenge those patents? Who wins? David Martin, a specialist in assesing patent portfolio values and technology transfers, also an advisor under the Clinton admin., held a speech in Brussels back in 2004 explaining the economic consequence of this and our connections with China: http://wiki.ffii.org/Martin041109En" REL="nofollow">Real economic consequences of the non-accountability of the patent establishment.

In the earliest days, patents where a way for the King to reward his supporters and friends, and often to enrich his own coffers. Today we are back to something like that, though the modern insiders are not the friends of the monarch, but patent lawyers, insurance companies, and other assorted purveyors of overhead draining any small company to its death. They will come out very nicely under this scheme, on both sides of the fence, with the future development as a looser either way. http://vrijschrift.org/swpat/030508_1/index.html" REL="nofollow">Laura Creighton explained this very well in a speech in Brussels 2003 on the subject of software patents.

If we are not willing to confront the integrity problem, which says that we are incentivised to issue garbage, and the sovereign immunity from accountability that exists in our patent system, then we are just rearranging deck chairs on the titanic.

//steelneck

Added on 13 Dec 2007 at 15:19 by anonymous

I do agree with Katinka's assessment of the current state of EU-China relations. As David Shambaugh has put it, the 'honeymoon' phase may well be over. Perhaps both sides, to a certain point, underestimated their differences, and only now came to realise it to a full extent. That was most visible on the difficulties experienced with the approval of the last Summit's Joint Declaration. I do believe that Europe had to change its tone in order to gain some concessions from the Chinese. Let's see if that works out.

EU-Russia: no more ambitions

EU-Russia: no more ambitions

EU-Russia: no more ambitions

Written by Katinka Barysch, 01 November 2007

by Katinka Barysch

The CER organised a conference on EU-Russia relations in Brussels on October 30th, together with ‘Russia Profile’ magazine. I have been to dozens of these EU-Russia meetings in the last couple of years. More often than not, they turn nasty, with the Russians making angry accusations and the Europeans going into a sulk. At our seminar, the atmosphere was strangely subdued.

No doubt, this was partly due to the professionalism of the panellists. People like Vladimir Chizhov, Konstantin Kosachev, Helga Schmid and Christian Cleutinx make a living addressing big problems without sounding alarming (details of the event can be found here http://www.cer.org.uk/russia_new/events_russia_new.html).


But diplomatic protocol was not the only reason for the lull. A sense of resignation has descended over EU-Russia relations. We have quietly discarded our lofty ambition to build a “strategic partnership based on common values”. Today we just want to get along, somehow.

The same lack of expectations turned last week’s EU-Russia summit in Mafra into a success of sorts. The Portuguese presidency of the EU did not even try to unblock talks on a new EU-Russia treaty. The change of government in Poland has increased the chances that the dispute over meat exports will be resolved and that Warsaw will lift its veto. But neither Russia nor the EU has much enthusiasm for a new treaty. What for? Instead of a shared vision, there is uncertainty: in Russia over its future leadership and direction, and in the EU over whether it can forge a common position among 27 member-states.

Both sides are groping for a path through this period of uncertainty. “Realism” is the term most widely used to describe today’s bilateral relationship. One participant at our seminar called for a “partnership of patience”, another referred to a “carefully crafted holding pattern”.

This total collapse of ambition was probably inevitable. Once Russia started to turn away from pluralist democracy, the EU’s constant talk about ‘common values’ simply antagonised Moscow. The EU ended up frustrated and disappointed. Bitterness grew on both sides. The political rhetoric became so shrill that it started to endanger practical co-operation in energy, investment or security.

Now both sides are trying to reassure each other that things are not that bad after all. Look, trade is growing by 30 per cent a year. EU companies are doing good business in Russia. Russians are coming to the EU in record numbers. The Union is allowed to observe mediation attempts in Transdniestria. Micro-successes are still possible: we now have an ‘early warning mechanism’ in case of disruptions to energy supplies, and a new cultural dialogue. Process matters.

But can the EU and Russia really afford to put their relationship on ice and wait for better days? World politics intrudes in the current lull. Russia has blocked EU-backed plans for Kosovo independence. It is against tougher sanctions aimed at preventing Iran from building a nuclear bomb. Russia behaves as if it didn’t need friends. But when it looks around the world – at a rising China, a disillusioned US, an unstable Middle East – it must conclude that the European countries are still its easiest and most reliable partners.

Vis-à-vis Russia, the EU looks divided, confused and often weaker than it is. That is partly because Russia forces the EU to clarify its own objectives. Can the EU become a more powerful international player while at the same time upholding its founding principles of democracy and human rights? Since different member countries have different answers, the EU tries to avoid the question.

Russia also puts the EU’s energy plans to the test. While paying lip service to a common energy policy, EU member-states are rushing to strike bilateral deals with Gazprom. Energy was supposed to be an area where the EU and Russia have clear common interests. But now the Russians complain about a ‘Gazprom clause’ in the Commission’s latest liberalisation package: state-owned foreign companies would not be allowed to buy gas pipelines in the EU, unless their governments agreed to also give European companies better access to their home markets.

Russia is not well placed to lecture the Europeans on energy market liberalisation. But Moscow has a point when asking the EU what it means by reciprocity. If the concept degenerates from a means for mutual openness to a new protectionist tool, it will do nothing to alleviate EU concerns about Russian underinvestment in its gas fields.

The energy debate shows that the shift from ‘values’ to ‘interests’ in EU-Russia relations can only go so far. Values – or more plainly, the way we see things – determine everything we do. When people and politicians in the EU and Russia talk about energy security, they mean different things. The same holds true for democracy, and other terms that allegedly describe the core objectives of our relationship.

I was an early advocate of the EU focusing less on ‘common values’ and more on mutual interests, on areas where practical co-operation is feasible and desirable (see http://www.cer.org.uk/pdf/p564_russia_strat_squabb.pdf).
But I am also the first one to admit that we have come full circle. Ultimately, the EU and Russia need to agree what they want to get out of their interaction.

Katinka Barysch is deputy director of the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 14 Nov 2007 at 17:24 by anonymous

Russia, can you blame them for having suspicions and making accusations. Just look around its borders, i bet they started to feel encircled. The big problem is that unipolar vision of Cheney/Bush, unipolarism also triggers the problem of Mackinders heartland that the world has faced for a hundred years now. I think Putin felt a need to use their huge energy resources as a lever to secure a more viable geopolitical position. Brzezinski revealed in a New York Council on Foreign Relations Foreign Affairs article 1997: What happens with the distribution of power on the Eurasian landmass will be of decisive importance to America`s global primacy. It is quite natural Russia acts knowing this and sees neighbouring countries becoming NATO members, it scares them. Scared bears usually become dangerous, just as scared people do. The other union of states, the american, would probably have acted even more suspicous, agressive and even protectionistic if the oppisite where true; a unipolaristic Russia with friends encircling those american states. The US must stop its reckless foreign policy, it can only lead to something very nasty, especially taking into account the world currency freeride that could end if it goes just a little too far. I think the globe soon will be fed up about that freeride.

//steelneck

Can the EU learn to live with Chinese mercantilism?

China and the EU

Can the EU learn to live with Chinese mercantilism?

Written by Philip Whyte, 29 October 2007

by Philip Whyte

Not long after its launch, the euro was famously dismissed by a disgruntled currency trader as a “toilet currency”. How things have changed. Since 2003, the euro’s external value has soared despite comparatively sluggish rates of economic growth in many of Europe’s largest economies. The strength of the euro has been a boon to European consumers who have been able to buy DVD players from China for less than the price of a meal at a run-of-the-mill restaurant. But not everyone has been celebrating—least of all France’s hyperactive president, Nicolas Sarkozy, who has been fretting about the economic downsides of a strong euro. Mr Sarkozy believes that the euro is now over-valued and that French companies’ trade competitiveness is being damaged as a result. Ever since he entered office in May, therefore, he has thrashed around looking for a culprit.

At first, he blamed the European Central Bank (ECB) for neglecting the euro’s external value and for pursuing its inflation target at the expense of economic growth. This struck many observers as odd, for at least two reasons. First, a central bank cannot target the inflation rate and the exchange rate simultaneously: was Mr Sarkozy suggesting that the ECB jettison its inflation target? Second, it seemed perverse to accuse the ECB of pursuing an excessively restrictive monetary policy. Real interest rates remain low by historical standards, and were even negative for much of the period between 2003 and 2004. More recent indicators—notably buoyant rates of broad money growth and lending to the private sector—hardly point to a central bank that has sacrificed economic growth on the altar of low inflation. Mr Sarkozy’s broadsides were in any case widely seen as an attack on the ECB’s institutional independence—so no-one was surprised when they were given short shrift.

Mr Sarkozy then shifted his attention across the Atlantic. Authorities in the US, he argued, needed to act to stem the US dollar’s decline against the euro. Again, however, it was not clear what Mr Sarkozy was proposing the US authorities should do. Raise short-term interest rates? You must be joking! The US Federal Reserve is trying to contain the fall-out from the crisis in sub-prime lending which is threatening to push the world’s largest economy into recession. This is why it cut short-term interest rates in September. In any case, it is hard to see what the US Federal Reserve could possibly do to support the US dollar. The dollar is weakening because the US is struggling to attract the capital inflows needed to fund its current-account deficit. As the world’s largest debtor, the US has to attract three-quarters of the world’s capital flows to service its external deficit. This is unsustainable—and not just because US assets have offered investors absolutely terrible returns in recent years. A weak US dollar is imperative if the US’s external deficit is to narrow.

Slowly, it dawned on Mr Sarkozy that the problem might lie to the east rather than the west. In the run-up to the G7 meeting in late October, the French government spoke rather less about the US dollar and rather more about the Chinese yuan. It had taken its time, but at last it had stumbled on the heart of the problem: namely, that parts of the world—mainly China, Japan and oil exporters in the Middle East and elsewhere—are saving vastly more than they are investing. This excess of savings over investment has resulted in colossal outflows of capital which have supported the spending habits of governments and households in the US and, to a lesser extent, Europe. That’s right, you read correctly. Developing economies such as China are now large net creditors to the developed world. This is totally at odds with what one might normally expect. Capital usually flows in the other direction, from the developed to the developing world. So what happened?

The short answer is that China and a number of other Asian economies have spent the best part of the last decade pursuing unashamedly mercantilist policies. There are two reasons for this. One is the abiding attraction of an egregious fallacy: that a country’s primary objective in trade is to export more than it imports. The other is the experience of the Asian crisis in the late 1990s, when countries with large external deficits were unable to defend their currencies in the face of huge capital outflows. Stung by this experience, many Asian countries did not choose to abandon fixed exchange rates. Instead, they decided that they should continue to maintain a peg of sorts against the US dollar—but by actively intervening to keep their currencies artificially weak. Since that date, many Asian countries have turned trade deficits into vast surpluses by accumulating foreign exchange reserves. And the world has been stuck with an asymmetric monetary system in which the euro and the US dollar have floated freely against each other, but not against Asian currencies.

The apparently insatiable appetite of China and other Asian countries for piles of depreciating US dollars has had undoubted benefits for the EU. The most important is the boost to domestic demand that the resulting strength of the euro has provided. This has worked in at least two ways. First, by bearing down on import prices, the strength of the euro has contained inflation—allowing the ECB to keep official interest rates lower than they would otherwise have been. Second, it has boosted consumers’ purchasing power. The Chinese government, in other words, has indirectly given European consumers and mortgage holders something looking like a free ride. The downside is that the yuan’s exchange rate is generating protectionist demands from beleaguered European firms labouring under the weight of a currency that has borne the brunt of global adjustments since 2002. The EU trade commissioner, Peter Mandelson, has been muttering darkly about the speed at which the EU’s trade deficit with China is growing; and hinted that the EU cannot maintain an open market for Chinese goods if the Chinese government does not change policy direction.

In the mid-nineteenth century, the UK famously used gunboats to open Chinese markets to opium. Times have changed and few would now advocate similar methods to persuade the Chinese government to let the yuan appreciate. In fact, there is not much the EU can do, other than to raise the rhetorical volume and wait for the domestic tensions generated by China’s policy to play themselves out. No-one knows how long this process will last. The Chinese people’s capacity for pain is legendary. But the point will surely come when the Chinese government succumbs to internal pressure and refocuses economic policy on raising the living standards of the wretched Chinese people rather than relentlessly acquiring assets in a depreciating foreign currency. When this happens, Mr Sarkozy should pay particularly close attention. For the mercantilism that China has practised looks suspiciously like that which he would be tempted to pursue if ever he were let loose on the ECB!

Philip Whyte is a senior research fellow at the Centre for European Reform.

Bridging the Atlantic: Domestic politics and Euro-American relations

Bridging the Atlantic

Bridging the Atlantic: Domestic politics and Euro-American relations

External Author(s)
Mark Nelson

Written by Mark Nelson, 05 December 1997

Russia in Europe

Russia in Europe

Russia in Europe

External Author(s)
Rodric Braithwaite

Written by Rodric Braithwaite, 05 February 1999

G8 and world politics

G8 and world politics

G8 and world politics

Written by Katinka Barysch, 11 June 2007

by Katinka Barysch

Angela Merkel can be content with the outcome of the G8 summit in Heiligendamm which she chaired with her by now characteristic mix of modesty, determination and pragmatism. Many people had predicted that the meeting would end in acrimony because of US-European disagreements on climate change and because of mounting tensions between Russia and the West. Instead, Merkel brokered a couple of impressive-looking headline agreements. Moreover, the meeting has proved those people wrong who say that the G8 is an irrelevant talking shop. Heiligendamm showed it is an important tool for global governance.

This meeting will be mainly be remembered for the US U-turn on climate change. In the run-up to the summit, the US officials had said that there was no chance that the Bush administration would sign up to ambitious numerical targets, such as those endorsed by the EU summit in March 2007 (also headed by Merkel). But at Heiligendamm, George W Bush backed, at least in principle, the objective of cutting greenhouse gas emission by 50 per cent by 2050. The US still insists that binding targets will need to involve China, India and other emerging powers. But it is nevertheless significant that he agreed to the start negotiations on a post-Kyoto regime in the framework of the United Nations.

The G8 countries also reconfirmed their aid commitments made at the Gleneagles summit in 2005, namely to write off multilateral debt worth $60 billion, to raise annual overseas development assistance to $50 billion (of which half should go to African countries) and to provide universal access to HIV treatment by 2010. But NGOs said this ‘recommitment’ did not amount to much, given that the G8 countries are already falling behind on their objectives and still oppose annual spending targets. Similarly, although the G8 leaders promised to spend $60 billion over coming years on fighting HIV, malaria and other diseases in developing countries, they did not add a timetable.

The summit agreements are big steps towards longer-term goals, but they leave the most controversial questions to be resolved at a later point in time. Neither was there much progress on other issues on the G8 agenda, such as the Doha trade round, Kosovo, Iran and the regulation of hedge funds.

What the summit did do, however, is provide a very useful snapshot of global politics at a time of leadership changes in many of the key countries.

Well done Angela!
Merkel has cemented her role as Europe’s leading political figure, and she has now added a global dimension. Previous achievements had already earned her a reputation as a skilled mediator and negotiator. Her tireless pre-summit diplomacy on climate change appears to have paid off. Her strategy was also smart. Knowing that failure to reach a climate deal would be blamed on the US (and not damage her popularity at home), she was in a strong position. She had played down expectations of a deal ahead of the summit while still leaning heavily on President Bush. Although the G8 agreements owe much to Merkel’s political skills and convictions, they are also evidence of a longer-term trend towards a more self-confident Germany which is not afraid to shoulder global responsibilities.

The new George W
Bush’s apparent U-turn on CO2 targets was partly motivated by the fear to antagonise or embarrass Merkel – a sign that she has successfully mended US-German relations after the falling-out over Iraq. Bush also wants good ties with Merkel as part of his broader efforts to strengthen US-EU relations. Some observers spotted a belated turn towards multilateralism. Having long been dismissive of multilateral organisations, Bush has now agreed that the UN should be the framework for post-Kyoto negotiations. On other issues too, Heiligendamm saw a more co-operative and conciliatory US president. He was friendly to Vladimir Putin, despite the latter’s aggressive hectoring ahead of the summit. He also promised that the US would cough up half of the $60 billion committed to healthcare initiatives in Africa.

Russia is back
Putin’s belligerence in the run-up to the G8 had fuelled fears that Heiligendamm would be the chilliest East-West encounter since Russia officially joined the G8 in 1998. Putin had threatened to re-direct Russian nuclear missiles towards Europe if the US went ahead with stationing parts of its missile defence system in the Czech Republic and Poland. Having failed to drive a wedge between the US and the Europeans, Putin then suggested that the US should station missile defences at Gabalan, a Russian-operated base in Azerbaijan. Security experts say that the proposal, first muted in 2004, is unattractive to the US not only because it implies shared control over a key US military installation, but also because Gabala is too close to Iran to intercept a potential attack from there. If Putin knew that the US answer would be No, his prime aim must have been to set the agenda – to first raise tensions and subsequently defuse them. Such behaviour is becoming typical of a resurgent Russia. Putin’s shrewd mixture of harsh statements followed by statesman-like conciliation is also meant for home consumption, ahead of the parliamentary election in December and the presidential changeover in early 2008.

Bye bye Blair
Heiligendamm was Blair’s last international summit but one (he will still attend the European Council on June 21st and 22nd). It should have been a grand finale for him, given that it made progress on climate change and poverty alleviation, his two top foreign policy priorities. But any sense of triumph Blair may have felt must have been dampened by the absence of public recognition. Blair has always argued that his decisions to send troops to Iraq and not criticise Bush in public were paying off in terms of the private influence in Washington. Diplomats say that Blair worked hard to mediate between Merkel and Bush before and during Heiligendamm. But in the end it was Merkel who received the credit for having persuaded Bush. At least Blair’s imminent departure from the political scene allowed him to talk openly about differences with Putin.

Welcome Sarkozy
For Nicolas Sarkozy the G8 meeting was the first opportunity to mingle with the leaders of the world’s biggest countries as French president. With parliamentary elections imminent, Heiligendamm was the perfect opportunity for Sarkozy to show his skills as statesman. He did so by putting forward a compromise proposal for the final status of Kosovo (rejected by Putin) and by calling for more international attention to Darfur (vaguely accepted). Sarkozy’s conciliatory language after a long private meeting with Putin raised concerns that he would follow Jacques Chirac’s uncritical stance on Russia. But Sarkozy made big efforts to distance himself from his polished predecessor by talking very openly, by not trying to steal Merkel’s show and by being nice to Bush.

A bigger club
The other G8 members – Italy, Canada and Japan – played a more marginal role, whereas some non-G8 countries got a lot of attention. Leaders from emerging Asia, Africa and South America have long taken part as observers in G8 meetings. It is now clear that the eight current members cannot fix any global priorities – whether climate change, Doha, global imbalances, terrorism or poverty – without the co-operation of other emerging powers. China’s economy is already much bigger than those of Italy and Canada, and China is also on course to overtake the US as the world’s number-one emitter of greenhouse gases. Both China and India have more than twice as many people as the US or all the European G8 members together. And the legitimacy of many G8 initiatives will depend on African or Latin American countries having a say.

Nevertheless, the Heiligendamm meeting decided against broadening the club’s membership. Instead, a new ‘Heiligendamm process’ will regularly bring together ministers from the G8 and the five ‘outreach countries’ (China, India, Brazil, Mexico and South-Africa), to discuss issues ranging from energy to intellectual property rights.

Some say that taking in China would destroy the democratic credentials of the G8 (although that argument is a lot less potent given Russia’s slide towards authoritarianism). Others fear for the club’s effectiveness. Merkel said, for example, that if the poorer nations had already been part of the G8, a compromise on climate change would have been impossible. But neither are the newcomers in a hurry to become full members. India and China – while keen to make their voices heard – insist that their status as developing countries does not allow them to shoulder the same global responsibilities as the current G8 countries.

Heiligendamm showed that the G8 is not just a talking shop as some of its critics have alleged. There was real drama as the sherpas haggled over the final communiqué until the last minute. And the results are important milestones in long-term fights against climate change and poverty. But the meeting also showed clearly that to remain relevant in the future, the G8 will eventually have to include China, India and other emerging powers.

Katinka Barysch is chief economist at the Centre for European Reform.

Comments

Added on 16 Jun 2007 at 15:16 by Wolfgang White

Sarkozy surely proved what kind of "skills as stateman" he has. His proposal to start a thread of violence in the Balkans, while shifting international attention on Darfur is "marvelous". One might ask if EU went in Africa, who would stay in the Balkans. Well, EU's senior "partner" of course. "Bravo" for Sarko, perhaps he should use http://blogs.ec.europa.eu/blog_wallstrom/page/wallstrom?entry=integration_reach_darfur_carbon_emissions#comment24use" REL="nofollow"> the internet more often.

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