The geopolitics of COVID-19: US-China rivalry and the imminent Kindleberger trap

被引:17
作者
Bahi, Riham [1 ]
机构
[1] Cairo Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Cairo, Egypt
关键词
Global governance; Geopolitics; Pandemic; COVID-19; US-China relations; Great power competition;
D O I
10.1108/REPS-10-2020-0153
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Purpose The spread of COVID-19 is not just a health crisis. The pandemic has taken a geopolitical dimension. The health crisis amplified the competitive dynamics between the USA and China, affected the provision of global public goods and injected instability into the global order. In line with the geopolitical zero-sum thinking, both the USA and China have sought to capitalize on the crisis to boost their international profile. Instead of working together to mitigate the health and economic impacts of COVID-19, the two powers fear that the other will exploit the current situation to accrue political, economic or military gains that will give it an edge after the pandemic subsides. The spread of COVID-19 has set off a "battle of narratives," in which China and the USA are accusing each other of failing to rise to the challenge. The world seems to be falling into a "Kindleberger Trap," in which the established power is unable to lead while the rising power is unwilling to assume responsibility. The COVID-19 crisis is occurring amid the collapse of global cooperation. The USA, the traditional leader of international collective efforts in times of crisis, has abandoned its role entirely. The lack of leadership at the global level during an international crisis may cause the breakdown of the international order. Design/methodology/approach This paper examines the US-China competitive dynamics through the lens of the work of Charles Kindleberger, which both liberals and realists regard as foundational when examining the dynamics of global crisis management. This paper also uses the meta-geopolitics framework to determine the ability of both China and the USA to respond to the current COVID-19 crisis and its implications for their power and standing in the international system. Findings This paper concludes that the only way to escape the Kindleberger trap is "to embed Sino-American relations in multilateralism." Originality/value As rivals, both the USA and China are seeking to capitalize on the crisis to boost their international profile. This paper probes how China and the USA navigated the ongoing COVID-19 crisis to determine whether or not they are currently in a "Kindleberger Trap," using elements of the meta-geopolitics framework of analysis, namely, health issues, domestic politics, economics, science and international diplomacy. Using the meta-geopolitics framework will help us determine the ability of both China and the USA to respond to the current COVID-19 crisis and the implications of that on their power and standing in the international system.
引用
收藏
页码:76 / 94
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   The geoeconomics of global semiconductor value chains: extraterritoriality and the US-China technology rivalry [J].
Malkin, Anton ;
He, Tian .
REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2024, 31 (02) :674-699
[22]   Capital liquidity and abnormal returns in the Taiwan stock market: The impact of the US-China trade conflict and the COVID-19 pandemic [J].
Chen, W. D. .
APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2025,
[23]   COVID-19: Business, China and geopolitics: economic development and new normality PROLOGUE [J].
Terol Rojo, Gabriel .
3C EMPRESA, 2020, :17-27
[25]   Influence of Geopolitics on Severity and Outcome in COVID-19 [J].
Bauer, Philippe R. .
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2022, 50 (04) :700-702
[26]   The impact of COVID-19 pandemic on construction safety in China and the US: A comparative study [J].
Duan, Pinsheng ;
Goh, Yang Miang ;
Zhou, Jianliang .
SAFETY SCIENCE, 2023, 161
[27]   COVID-19 geopolitics: silence and erasure in Cambodia and Myanmar in times of pandemic [J].
Grundy-Warr, Carl ;
Lin, Shaun .
EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS, 2020, 61 (4-5) :493-510
[28]   The new security grey zone: export controls, emerging technologies and US-China technological rivalry [J].
Rasador, Guilherme Schneider ;
Cunha, Andre Moreira .
PACIFIC REVIEW, 2025,
[29]   Australia's new alliance dynamics, US-China rivalry and conflict entrapment in outer space [J].
Schaefer, David .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2018, 72 (01) :31-48
[30]   US–China Relations: Nationalism, the Trade War, and COVID-19 [J].
Brandon M. Boylan ;
Jerry McBeath ;
Bo Wang .
Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences, 2021, 14 :23-40