Review

1

The Realist’s Guide to the Coronavirus Outbreak

The Realist’s Guide to the Coronavirus
Outbreak
Globalization is heading for the ICU, and other foreign-
policy insights into the nature of the growing international
crisis.

Stephen M. Walt
Foreign Policy, March 9, 2020

“Pedestrians wear face masks as they walk outside the New Orient Landmark hotel in Macau on Jan. 22,
2020.”

==

The realist approach to international politics and foreign policy does not devote much, if
any, attention to the issue of potential pandemics like the COVID-19 outbreak. No theory
explains everything, of course, and realism focuses primarily on the constraining effects
of anarchy, the reasons why great powers compete for advantage, and the enduring
obstacles to effective cooperation among states. It has little to say about interspecies viral
transmission, epidemiology, or public health best practices, so you shouldn’t ask a realist
to tell you whether you should start working from home.

Despite these obvious limitations, realism can still offer useful insights into some of the
issues that the new coronavirus outbreak has raised. It is worth remembering, for
example, that a central event in Thucydides’ account of the Peloponnesian War (one of
the founding texts in the realist tradition) is the plague that struck Athens in 430 B.C. and
persisted for more than three years. Historians believe the plague may have killed about a
third of Athens’ population—including prominent leaders such as Pericles—and it had

2

obvious negative effects on Athens’ long-term power potential. Might realism have
something to say about the situation we find ourselves in today?

First, and most obviously, the present emergency reminds us that states are still the main
actors in global politics. Every few years, scholars and pundits suggest that states are
becoming less relevant in world affairs and that other actors or social forces (i.e.,
nongovernmental organizations, multinational corporations, international terrorists,
global markets, etc.) are undermining sovereignty and pushing the state toward the
dustbin of history. When new dangers arise, however, humans look first and foremost to
national governments for protection. After 9/11, Americans didn’t turn to the United
Nations, Microsoft Corp., or Amnesty International to protect them from al Qaeda; they
looked to Washington and the federal government. And so it is today: All over the world,
citizens are looking to public officials to provide authoritative information and to fashion
an effective response. As the journalist Derek Thompson wrote on Twitter last week:
“There are no libertarians in a pandemic.” That is not to say that broader global efforts
are not necessary as well; it is simply to remind us that despite globalization, states
remain the central political actors in the contemporary world. Realists have emphasized
this point for decades, and the coronavirus is providing yet another vivid reminder.

Second, although the more structural versions of realism tend to downplay differences
among states (apart from relative power), thus far responses to the coronavirus outbreak
are exposing the strengths and weakness of different types of regimes. Scholars have
previously suggested that rigid dictatorships are more vulnerable to famines, epidemics,
and other disasters, largely because they tend to suppress information and top officials
may not recognize the gravity of the situation until it is too late to prevent it. This is
precisely what appears to have happened in China and also Iran: People who tried to
sound the alarm were silenced or punished, and top officials tried to hide what was
happening instead of mobilizing promptly to address it. Authoritarian governments can
be good at mobilizing resources and undertaking ambitious responses—witness Beijing’s
ability to quarantine whole cities and impose other far-reaching controls—but only after
the people at the top figure out and acknowledge what is going on.

Because information flows more freely in democracies—due in part to independent
media and the ability of lower-level officials to sound the alarm without being
punished—they should be better at identifying when a problem is emerging. For
democracies, however, problems may emerge when trying to fashion and implement
timely responses. This deficiency may be especially severe in the United States, because
the first responders and other agencies that do the real work in an emergency are mostly
under the control of a plethora of state or local governments. Unless there is adequate
prior planning and effective coordination from Washington—something that is not easy
to pull off in the best of circumstances—even accurate and timely warnings may not
produce effective emergency measures. The bungled reactions to Hurricane Katrina in
New Orleans and Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico are obvious cases in point.

Unfortunately, as Michelle Goldberg pointed out in a recent New York Times column,
“Donald Trump’s response to the coronavirus combines the worst features of autocracy

3

and of democracy, mixing opacity and propaganda with leaderless inefficiency.” Having
previously downgraded disaster preparedness throughout the federal government and in
the White House itself, Trump has consistently downplayed the seriousness of the
coronavirus outbreak, overruled or challenged the assessments of qualified scientists,
failed to coordinate an effective federal response, picked fights with local officials who
are on the front lines, and blamed it all on his predecessor, who has now been out of
office for more than three years. Put a would-be authoritarian in charge of a decentralized
democratic system, add a serious emergency, and this is the sort of train-wreck to expect.

Is there a silver lining? Realism suggests there might be a small one. In a competitive
world, states cast a wary eye on what others are doing and have a big incentive to imitate
success. New military innovations tend to be quickly adopted by others, for example,
because failing to adapt can lead one to fall behind and become vulnerable. This
perspective suggests that as some states develop more effective responses to the
coronavirus, others will quickly follow suit. Over time, a set of global best practices will
emerge, a process that will occur more rapidly if states share accurate information with
one another and refrain from politicizing it or using it to gain advantage.

Unfortunately, realism also reminds us that achieving effective international cooperation
on this issue may not be easy, despite the obvious need for it. Realists recognize that
cooperation happens all the time, and that norms and institutions can help states
cooperate when it is in their interest to do so. But realists also warn that international
cooperation is often fragile, either because states fear that others will not abide by their
commitments, worry that cooperation will benefit others more than it benefits them, or
want to avoid bearing a disproportionate share of the costs. I don’t think such concerns
will prevent states from doing a lot to help one another address this global problem, but
any or all of them could make the collective response less effective.

Lastly, foreign-policy realism also suggests that if the epidemic does not subside quickly
and more or less permanently (as the 2003 SARS epidemic did), it will reinforce the
growing trend toward deglobalization that is already underway. Back in the 1990s,
apostles of globalization believed the world was becoming ever-more-tightly connected
by trade, travel, global financial integration, the digital revolution, and the apparent
superiority of liberal capitalist democracy, and concluded that we’d all get busy getting
rich in an increasingly flat and borderless world. The past decade or more has witnessed a
steady retreat from that optimistic vision, with more and more people willing to trade
efficiency, growth, and openness for the sake of autonomy and the preservation of
cherished ways of life. As the Brexiteers in the United Kingdom put it, they want to “take
back control.”

For realists, this backlash is unsurprising. As the realist Kenneth Waltz wrote in his
landmark Theory of International Politics, “the domestic imperative is ‘specialize,’” and
“the international imperative is ‘take care of yourself’!” The Christian realist Reinhold
Niebuhr offered a similar warning in the 1930s, writing that “the development of
international commerce, the increased economic interdependence among the nations, and

4

the whole apparatus of a technological civilization, increase the problems and issues
between nations much more rapidly than the intelligence to solve them can be created.”

Liberal theorists have long argued that increasing interdependence between states would
be a source of prosperity and an obstacle to international rivalry. By contrast, realists
warn that close ties are also a source of vulnerability and a potential cause of conflict.
What Waltz and Niebuhr are saying is that ever-tighter connections between states create
as many problems as they solve, sometimes more quickly than we can devise solutions
for them. For this reason, states—the critical building blocks of international politics—try
to reduce risks and vulnerabilities by placing limits on their dealings with one another.

From a realist perspective, therefore, the coronavirus is likely to give states another
reason to limit globalization. Hyperglobalization made the global financial system more
vulnerable to crises and created serious domestic political problems due to job
displacement; we now know that it also increased our exposure—literally—to the sort of
global pandemic we may be witnessing today.

To be clear: Realism doesn’t predict a retreat to autarky or even the same level of
deglobalization that occurred as a result of the two world wars and the Great Depression.
Contemporary states cannot afford to sever all ties, even in the face of something like the
coronavirus. But I’m guessing that the high-water mark of contemporary globalization is
now behind us, and that a virus that crossed the boundary between two species is going to
one of the reasons that borders between states will become a bit higher.

==

Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at
Harvard University.

Place your order
(550 words)

Approximate price: $22

Calculate the price of your order

550 words
We'll send you the first draft for approval by September 11, 2018 at 10:52 AM
Total price:
$26
The price is based on these factors:
Academic level
Number of pages
Urgency
Basic features
  • Free title page and bibliography
  • Unlimited revisions
  • Plagiarism-free guarantee
  • Money-back guarantee
  • 24/7 support
On-demand options
  • Writer’s samples
  • Part-by-part delivery
  • Overnight delivery
  • Copies of used sources
  • Expert Proofreading
Paper format
  • 275 words per page
  • 12 pt Arial/Times New Roman
  • Double line spacing
  • Any citation style (APA, MLA, Chicago/Turabian, Harvard)

Our guarantees

Delivering a high-quality product at a reasonable price is not enough anymore.
That’s why we have developed 5 beneficial guarantees that will make your experience with our service enjoyable, easy, and safe.

Money-back guarantee

You have to be 100% sure of the quality of your product to give a money-back guarantee. This describes us perfectly. Make sure that this guarantee is totally transparent.

Read more

Zero-plagiarism guarantee

Each paper is composed from scratch, according to your instructions. It is then checked by our plagiarism-detection software. There is no gap where plagiarism could squeeze in.

Read more

Free-revision policy

Thanks to our free revisions, there is no way for you to be unsatisfied. We will work on your paper until you are completely happy with the result.

Read more

Privacy policy

Your email is safe, as we store it according to international data protection rules. Your bank details are secure, as we use only reliable payment systems.

Read more

Fair-cooperation guarantee

By sending us your money, you buy the service we provide. Check out our terms and conditions if you prefer business talks to be laid out in official language.

Read more
Open chat
1
You can contact our live agent via WhatsApp! Via + 1 929 473-0077

Feel free to ask questions, clarifications, or discounts available when placing an order.

Order your essay today and save 20% with the discount code GURUH