Who will rule the rules-based order?
14 Jan 2022|

Will the West remain committed to the rules-based international order when it is no longer the one making the rules? That will be one of the most intriguing questions of the next two decades. If there’s one principle that has united electorates, policymakers, politicians and media across the West, it’s that rules matter for just about everything else. Disrespect of common rules has long been met with intense anger and a forceful response.

Consider the United Kingdom, where Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s raw charisma enabled him to win and hold on to power, effectively redrawing the country’s political map in the process. Until recently, his public approval had withstood florid displays of incompetence, a rising pandemic death toll and an economic recession. But Johnson is now finally haemorrhaging support for one simple reason: he and his government went too far in disregarding the rules. The revelation that there was a party at 10 Downing Street while the rest of the country was in lockdown has hurt Johnson’s reputation more than any of his other scandals or transgressions.

At the international level, Western governments routinely condemn others for rule-breaking. Russia, for example, has been rebuked for its annexation of Crimea, repeated cyberattacks on other countries and physical attacks on Russian dissidents abroad. China, too, has been condemned as a major transgressor. US President Joe Biden may not agree with much that his predecessor said or did, but he has maintained a striking continuity with the Trump administration’s characterisation of China as a global menace that steals intellectual property, maintains illegal subsidies, permits rampant corruption and is carrying out genocide.

And yet, in the coming decades, the biggest global threat will not be China the rule-breaker, but China the rule-maker. China’s growing influence over international norms, standards and conventions is a game-changer. For centuries, Western powers have taken it for granted that they are the world’s norm-setters, massively influencing other countries’ policies through the ‘Washington Consensus’, the ‘Brussels effect’ and other channels.

A term coined in 1989 by the economist John Williamson, the Washington Consensus now broadly refers to market-based economic policies and a limited role for the state. For decades, this Western liberal approach underpinned the work of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade Organization, because it was seen as a universal recipe for good governance and prosperity.

The Brussels effect is a newer coinage, popularised by legal scholar Anu Bradford to describe the global impact of the European Union’s regulatory policies. The EU’s standards governing data privacy, product safety, genetically modified organisms, sexual rights and other issues tend to be adopted as a matter of course by multinational corporations and other countries seeking access to Europe’s massive single market.

Over the past decade, however, the free-market Washington Consensus has been challenged by a ‘Beijing consensus’ of managed globalisation, industrial policy and state capitalism, while the Brussels effect has run up against a potential ‘Beijing effect’: China’s export of technology standards through its ‘Digital Silk Road’.

Many global rule-setting bodies that once underpinned European and American predominance now have Chinese leaders. These include (or have included) the International Telecommunication Union, the International Organization for Standardization, and the International Electrotechnical Commission. China is poised to set the standards for rapidly developing technologies such as artificial intelligence and robotics, and Chinese companies’ technological infrastructure—built to Chinese standards—has spread to numerous countries.

As Bradford notes, while the Beijing effect operates differently than the Brussels effect, it still has far-reaching consequences. And as China becomes a bigger trade partner to more countries, its global influence will continue to increase.

Whether the Western commitment to rules will endure has therefore become an urgent question. What if that commitment was always more about the power it conferred than about the underlying principles it upheld? Would Europeans and Americans respect a global rules-based order that followed ‘Xi Jinping thought’ instead of Western Enlightenment thinkers? Many in China, Russia and other countries assume that we would not, taking that as proof that our commitment is merely a means to our own ends.

To stay ahead of the curve, some Western governments have begun to rethink the shape of the rules-based order. There’s talk of departing from universal, global institutions in favour of a new arrangement based on rules set within like-minded clubs. The EU, for example, is now holding a debate about ‘strategic sovereignty’, recognising that if it operates as a single bloc, it could have the clout to preserve the rules-based liberal order for itself and other willing participants. The alternative is to submit to illiberal challenges from Xi, Russian President Vladimir Putin or a return of Trumpism in the US.

A similar shift is visible across the Atlantic, where the Biden administration has gone from supporting global institutions to imagining a new kind of rules-based order comprising the world’s democracies. The White House’s recent Summit for Democracy could be understood as an archetype for how this new order would function.

It remains to be seen how smaller powers would navigate the changing landscape. One striking clue can be found in the Johnson government’s March 2021 integrated review of security, defence, development and foreign policy. Concluding that, ‘A defence of the status quo is no longer sufficient for the decade ahead’, it advocates a more dynamic approach than merely ‘preserving the post-Cold War “rules-based international system”’.

The defining fights of the 21st century will be about who has the power to make the rules. It’s currently anyone’s game.