Bargaining to Lose the Global Commons

Natasha Chichilnisky-Heal, G. Chichilnisky
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Abstract

In "Bargaining to Lose: The Permeability Approach to Post Transition Resource Extraction" [1] Natasha Chichilnisky-Heal introduces an original and fertile explanation for the resource curse. Her "permeability" approach questions the treatment of the state as a decision maker having the public good as an objective, and replaces it by the results of a bargaining game between the state and International organizations. Her new theory is illustrated with unique hands-on experience in the case of copper and gold mines in Mongolia and Zambia, and focuses on a bargaining game between the state and key financial organizations: the Bretton Woods Institutions (IMF, World Bank) and MNCs. This piece extends and generalizes "Bargaining to lose" providing economic models that validate the original conclusions, and exploring its implications for the global commons: the atmosphere, the oceans and biodiversity. Chichilnisky-Heal’s "permeable state" is a transition to a new globalized society where the sovereign state - a relatively recent creation - is receding giving rise to a new set of global economic agents and institutions that better explain the dynamics of the global commons. We show that the permeable state complements other explanations for the resource curse [2] as a global market failure magnified by globalization and based on the lack of well-defined property rights on natural resources during the pre-industrial period. We generalize Chichilnisky-Heal’s "bargaining to lose" approach to the resource curse and explore its natural implications for the environmental crisis on the global commons. The solutions that Chichilnisky-Heal proposes, e.g. limiting the Bretton Woods’ Institutions’ ‘seat at the negotiation table’ of resource extraction contracts, could help resolve the environmental crisis that is based on over-extraction of global resources.
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失去全球公地的讨价还价
Natasha Chichilnisky-Heal在《讨价还价的损失:过渡后资源开采的渗透性方法》[1]中对资源诅咒提出了独到而丰富的解释。她的“渗透性”方法质疑了将国家作为以公共利益为目标的决策者的待遇,取而代之的是国家与国际组织之间讨价还价的结果。她的新理论以蒙古和赞比亚铜矿和金矿的独特实践经验为例,并重点关注国家与主要金融组织(布雷顿森林机构(IMF、世界银行)和跨国公司)之间的讨价还价游戏。这篇文章扩展和概括了“讨价还价的损失”,提供了验证原始结论的经济模型,并探讨了其对全球公地的影响:大气,海洋和生物多样性。希奇尔尼斯基-希尔的“可渗透国家”是向一个新的全球化社会的过渡,在这个社会中,主权国家——一个相对较新的创造物——正在消退,产生了一套新的全球经济主体和机构,它们更好地解释了全球公地的动态。我们表明,可渗透状态补充了对资源诅咒的其他解释[2],作为全球化放大的全球市场失灵,并且基于前工业化时期对自然资源缺乏明确的产权。我们将奇奇尔尼斯基-希尔的“讨价还价”方法推广到资源诅咒,并探讨其对全球公地环境危机的自然影响。Chichilnisky-Heal提出的解决方案,例如限制布雷顿森林机构在资源开采合同谈判桌上的席位,可以帮助解决基于过度开采全球资源的环境危机。
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