经济危机与国际组织的生存

Yoram Z. Haftel, Bar Nadel
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摘要

经济困难时期如何影响各国的外交政策,特别是其国际承诺?虽然大量文献都认为经济危机会导致国内政治优先而牺牲国际合作,但这些说法很少经过系统的实证检验。本研究探讨了这些关系的一个重要方面:经济危机对国际组织(IOs)生存的影响。从理论上讲,我们认为,尽管经济危机会削弱成员国对国际组织的承诺,但同时也凸显了成员国解决危机根源并减轻其最恶劣影响的能力。因此,经济危机实际上有利于国际组织的长期存在。我们预计这种效应对于货币危机、负有经济使命的国际组织和区域性国际组织尤为明显,因为它们在经济困难时期对国际合作具有特殊意义。我们利用国际组织的综合样本以及 1970 年至 2014 年的货币、银行和主权债务危机数据对这些猜想进行了检验。利用事件史模型并控制国际组织生存的几种替代解释,我们发现理论预期得到了充分的经验支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Economic crises and the survival of international organizations

How do hard economic times affect countries’ foreign policy and, specifically, their international commitments? Although a large body of literature assumes that economic crises lead to the prioritization of domestic politics at the expense of international cooperation, these claims are rarely subjected to systematic empirical tests. This study examines one important aspect of these relationships: the consequences of economic crises for the survival of international organizations (IOs), a question that attracted only scant scholarly attention to date. Theoretically, we argue that even though economic crises can weaken member states’ commitment to IOs, they also underscore their ability to tackle the root causes of such crises and mitigate their most pernicious effects. As such, economic crises are actually conducive to IO longevity. We expect this effect to be especially pronounced for currency crises, IOs with an economic mandate, and regional IOs, given their particular relevance for international cooperation during hard economic times. These conjectures are tested with a comprehensive sample of IOs and data on currency, banking and sovereign debt crises from 1970 to 2014. Using event history models and controlling for several alternative explanations of IO survival, we find ample empirical support for the theoretical expectations.

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