This book examines the effect of economic power on a states strategic autonomy.
This book examines the effect of economic power on a states strategic autonomy.
Strategic autonomy is a fundamental condition for the availability of strategic options in the interaction of states. This book provides the first clear operational definition of the concept and offers an analysis of the relevance of the national economy to strategic autonomy. The main sources of economic power size of the economy, position in trade and technological networks, savings, wealth, and finance and their impact on strategic autonomy are analyzed in depth. The strategic governance of the national economy is also addressed as a way of ensuring that national economic power can work as strategic power for a country, providing it with strategic autonomy. The strategies pursued by China which in under four decades has gone from an underdeveloped state to the main challenger of the dominant world power and Germany which, despite being defeated in World War II, having no nuclear weapons and having chosen to be a "civilian power", became the dominant power in Europe are analyzed in depth, as two paradigmatic examples of the theory developed by the book.
This book will be of much interest to students of strategic studies, economics, foreign policy and International Relations.
INTRODUCTION, PART I ON STRATEGY,
1. The Historical Evolution of the
Thought on Strategy,
2. A Modern Perspective,
3. The Economy as a Strategic
Theater, PART II ON STRATEGIC AUTONOMY,
4. Strategic Autonomy: A Proposed
Framework, PART III ECONOMIC POWER AND STRATEGIC AUTONOMY,
5. On Economic
Power: Overview,
6. Size Matters,
7. Worldwide Webs: Trade and Technology,
8.
Saving, Wealth and Finance, PART IV ON STRATEGIC GOVERNANCE,
9. National
Strategy and its Governance,
10. The Challenges of Strategic Economic
Governance, PART V TWO PARADIGMATIC CASES: CHINA AND GERMANY,
11. Why These
Cases,
12. The Case of China,
13. The Case of Germany, CONCLUSIONS
Vitor Bento has a PhD in Strategic Studies (2020) from the University of Lisbon.