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This is an archive article published on March 26, 2011

Remember the rest

Niall Ferguson loses his way while tracking how the West rose above the Rest.

These days the argumentative space is thick with competing estimates of the decline of Western — primarily American — power. To take just two of the most recent publications: in The Future of Power Joseph Nye offers a compelling elaboration of his concept of “smart power” and in Monsoon: The Indian Ocean and the Future of American Power Robert Kaplan argues that the global balance of power will now be negotiated around the rim of that ocean.

Niall Ferguson’s contribution to the debate is to caution against the expectation that the shift in power from the West to the Rest will happen incrementally. Civilisations,he argues,are highly complex systems with infinite components in play,with the equilibrium constantly shifting enough to accommodate change and stress. But: “There comes a moment when they ‘go critical’.” To know if the West is nearing that critical stage,it is instructive to know how it came to achieve the kind of dominance it did over the past 500 years.

Ferguson is the author of robust and controversial books of history like Empire: How Britain Made the Modern World and Colossus: The Rise and Fall of America’s Empire. Each coincided with the big global story of the year (America’s post-9/11 wars,America’s reliance on East Asian capital). Here he reckons with China’s rise.

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To cut to the chase— and also unfortunately,to cut past Ferguson’s great skill for the historical narrative,especially his instinct for the choice anecdote — he says it is misleading to over-emphasise the role of empire in the ascendency of the West over the Rest. Instead,using a cringe-worthy phrase clearly used to embrace the tablet generation,he submits that the West,beginning around 1500,developed six killer applications: competition (drawn from a “decentralisation of economic and political life”,a factor that ultimately privileged Europe’s small warring states over the once solid empire of,say,China),science,property rights,medicine,consumer society and work ethic. These applications made it possible for the West to evolve a complex set of institutions — and institutions,he stresses,are “often the things that keep a culture honest,determining how far it is conducive to good behaviour rather than bad”.

It causes Ferguson immense grief that even as the Resterners (the word is another nod to the fact that this epic narrative reaches out to the popular reader) have begun to download the applications to chart their own ascendency,Westerners are failing to heed the lessons of history — if,he says,they have read enough history — and iterate “the superiority of that package”.

It is here that Ferguson’s thesis gets somewhat confusing: is he tracking the possible decline of the Western power or the end of the West’s uniqueness? Is it the triumph of Western science,its work ethic and its template for organising economic life that is at hand,or is it that the Rest’s appropriation of this template necessarily implies a comparative disadvantage for the West?

Perhaps Ferguson doesn’t explain his conclusion well because his battle at the end of it appears to be against relativism — and because he,all too predictably,expends so much narrative space in assigning geographical indications to beneficial human achievements,he leaves no space for those outside of his chosen realm to be accommodated. It is not that he wishes to remain resolutely unapologetic about his views — that would be fine. It is that he just tries too hard. He should give up. Like the West’s ascendency,that appropriation too is past its use-by date.

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