Difference between revisions of "Rogowski"

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(New page: Ronald Rogowski is a political economic theorist that emphasizes the primacy of domestic economic interests as far as explaining the international political economy. His argument draws on ...)
 
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Ronald Rogowski is a political economic theorist that emphasizes the primacy of domestic economic interests as far as explaining the international political economy. His argument draws on classical theorist Adam Smith who believed that interest-based factions explained foreign policy. His basic idea was that markets ruled kings, and it didnt' really matter so much who was on the throne. According to Smith nations went to war not because of their type of leadership, or their religion but due to the pressure from merchants and manufacturers. The producers matter the most. Consumers are too large to organize. Rogowski's argument goes hand in hand with Smith's. Rogowski's Stolper-Samuelson theorem argues that the foreign economic policy of states determines the international landscape and that each states foreign policy is shaped by domestic interest groups, which are divided into two groups: capital and labor.
 
Ronald Rogowski is a political economic theorist that emphasizes the primacy of domestic economic interests as far as explaining the international political economy. His argument draws on classical theorist Adam Smith who believed that interest-based factions explained foreign policy. His basic idea was that markets ruled kings, and it didnt' really matter so much who was on the throne. According to Smith nations went to war not because of their type of leadership, or their religion but due to the pressure from merchants and manufacturers. The producers matter the most. Consumers are too large to organize. Rogowski's argument goes hand in hand with Smith's. Rogowski's Stolper-Samuelson theorem argues that the foreign economic policy of states determines the international landscape and that each states foreign policy is shaped by domestic interest groups, which are divided into two groups: capital and labor.
 
Capital is paying people to use the means and modes of production and Labor is people using the means and modes of production to produce things. Liberalization benefits the abundant factor, so if you are trying to explain the level of integration in the international economy, you need to look at which interest groups are in power in the prominent nation states. If the relatively abundant factors are determining the state's economic policy then the world should be seeing relatively open, free markets. Competition is more rife between factors than it is between particular industries. Rogowski makes the assumption that a person's economic interests determine their political preferences.
 
Capital is paying people to use the means and modes of production and Labor is people using the means and modes of production to produce things. Liberalization benefits the abundant factor, so if you are trying to explain the level of integration in the international economy, you need to look at which interest groups are in power in the prominent nation states. If the relatively abundant factors are determining the state's economic policy then the world should be seeing relatively open, free markets. Competition is more rife between factors than it is between particular industries. Rogowski makes the assumption that a person's economic interests determine their political preferences.
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Rogowski’s theory, however, is not without its flaws. Rogowski bases his theory off of three assumptions regarding the domestic political process: that the beneficiaries of an increase in trade will try to continue and accelerate the ease and safety of trade; that the beneficiaries of trade, through their increased wealth, will be able to have greater influence in the political sphere; and that as the wealth and political power of a minority group increases, that minority group will be able to gain enough power to push the majority out of the political arena and thus create a vicious circle in which the wealthy minority manipulates policy to its favor to increase its wealth and so on. However, while this assumption holds true in some political regimes, it certainly cannot be considered to be ubiquitous. Democracies and Republics are specifically designed to ensure that the privileged few are unable to take advantage of the underprivileged. This can be seen in that many democracies/republics, such as the United States, Brazil, and much of Europe, have large disparities of wealth yet are not controlled by the interests of the wealthy.

Revision as of 16:49, 1 October 2010

Ronald Rogowski is a political economic theorist that emphasizes the primacy of domestic economic interests as far as explaining the international political economy. His argument draws on classical theorist Adam Smith who believed that interest-based factions explained foreign policy. His basic idea was that markets ruled kings, and it didnt' really matter so much who was on the throne. According to Smith nations went to war not because of their type of leadership, or their religion but due to the pressure from merchants and manufacturers. The producers matter the most. Consumers are too large to organize. Rogowski's argument goes hand in hand with Smith's. Rogowski's Stolper-Samuelson theorem argues that the foreign economic policy of states determines the international landscape and that each states foreign policy is shaped by domestic interest groups, which are divided into two groups: capital and labor. Capital is paying people to use the means and modes of production and Labor is people using the means and modes of production to produce things. Liberalization benefits the abundant factor, so if you are trying to explain the level of integration in the international economy, you need to look at which interest groups are in power in the prominent nation states. If the relatively abundant factors are determining the state's economic policy then the world should be seeing relatively open, free markets. Competition is more rife between factors than it is between particular industries. Rogowski makes the assumption that a person's economic interests determine their political preferences.

Rogowski’s theory, however, is not without its flaws. Rogowski bases his theory off of three assumptions regarding the domestic political process: that the beneficiaries of an increase in trade will try to continue and accelerate the ease and safety of trade; that the beneficiaries of trade, through their increased wealth, will be able to have greater influence in the political sphere; and that as the wealth and political power of a minority group increases, that minority group will be able to gain enough power to push the majority out of the political arena and thus create a vicious circle in which the wealthy minority manipulates policy to its favor to increase its wealth and so on. However, while this assumption holds true in some political regimes, it certainly cannot be considered to be ubiquitous. Democracies and Republics are specifically designed to ensure that the privileged few are unable to take advantage of the underprivileged. This can be seen in that many democracies/republics, such as the United States, Brazil, and much of Europe, have large disparities of wealth yet are not controlled by the interests of the wealthy.