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发表于 2008-4-22 12:52:41
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这种共识是最近的产物。使全球化成为可能的政治变革发生在非常短的一段时间内——确切地说,是从1978年至1991年。第一个、也是最重要的一个进展,是中国决定从毛**时代的计划经济走向市场经济——邓小平于1978年启动了相应的改革。一年后,玛格丽特•撒切尔(Margaret Thatcher)在英国掌权。她采取的首批举措之一是取消外汇管制,减轻了伦敦崛起为全球金融中心的痛苦,为全球树立了榜样。然后,1980年,罗纳德•里根(Ronald Reagan)凭借解除管制和减税的施政纲领执掌美国大权,极大地推动了全球各地的市场意识形态。上世纪80年代中期,欧盟(EU)承诺创建单一市场。
1989年柏林墙的倒塌,让东欧(以及俄罗斯本身)得以加入全球化游戏。上世纪80年代还见证了拉美大国民粹主义贸易保护论者的声誉扫地。最后,在1991年,发生了另一个巨大的变化:印度领导人决定摆脱自独立以来一直束缚印度经济发展的管制和保护主义。
因此,在不到15年的时间内,处于世界权力核心的政界精英们得出了大体相似的结论。他们欢迎全球化商业和市场经济。
其结果是构建了这样一个世界:如今在北京、莫斯科和德里做生意,感觉就和在伦敦和纽约一样自然。但这样一个世界伴随我们的时间还不到20年。早先的全球化时代都因政治剧变而终结——1914年战争的爆发,以及上世纪30年代法西斯主义的抬头。那么,相同的一幕会重演吗?
That consensus is a recent creation. The political changes that made globalisation possible took place in a remarkably short period of time – from 1978 to 1991 to be precise. The first and most important development was China's decision to turn from Maoism to the market, with the reforms initiated by Deng Xiaoping in 1978. A year later, Margaret Thatcher came to power in Britain. One of her first acts was the abolition of foreign exchange controls, easing London's rise as a global financial centre and setting an example that was emulated internationally. Then, in 1980, Ronald Reagan took power in the US on a platform of deregulation and tax cuts – giving a huge boost to market ideology around the world. In the mid-1980s, the European Union committed itself to creating a single market.
In 1989, the collapse of the Berlin wall allowed eastern Europe – and Russia itself – to join the globalisation game. The 1980s also saw the discrediting of protectionist populists in the largest countries of Latin America. Finally, in 1991, came another huge change: the decision by Indian leaders to move away from the regulation and protectionism that had hobbled the Indian economy since independence.
So, in less than 15 years, the political elites in the power centres of the world had come to broadly similar conclusions. They embraced global business and market economics.
The result is a world in which it now feels as natural to do business in Beijing, Moscow and Delhi as in London and New York. But this world has been with us for less than 20 years. Previous eras of globalisation were ended by political upheaval – the outbreak of war in 1914 and the rise of fascism in the 1930s. So could the same thing happen again? |
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