[IP] Measurement of Global Power Potential and Actual Power of Nations**
Begin forwarded message:
From: Ram Narayanan <ram@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: January 2, 2006 12:20:45 PM EST
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Measurement of Global Power Potential and Actual Power of  
Nations**
Dear Dave:
An illuminating -- and path-breaking -- research paper titled,
GLOBAL POWER FROM THE 18TH TO THE 21ST CENTURY: POWER POTENTIAL  
(VIP2), STRATEGIC ASSETS AND ACTUAL POWER (VIP),
by Dr Arvind Virmani, until recently, Director & Chief Executive of  
ICRIER (Indian Council for Research in International Economic  
Relations), New Delhi, was released in November 2005.
The paper shows how the basic building blocks of growth theory, the  
aggregate production function, factor productivity and technical  
change can be used to define a simple index of GLOBAL POWER POTENTIAL  
(VIP2). It also comes to grip with the millitary aspects of power by  
defining another index, the INDEX OF ACTUAL POWER (VIP), that  
combines the index of power potential with a measure of strategic  
assets (technology, equipment and skills related to defense).
The paper provides a relatively objective measure to project the  
emerging future of nations -- when a country can be classified as a  
(potential) 'global power' or a 'regional power' or otherwise.
Some of the conclusions emerging from this study have important  
implications for US-India relations which, hopefully, will be noted  
by the Congress of the United States as well as by policymakers in  
India. Also, they have implications for the future relationship  
between India and the other democracies of the world.
Following is a summary of what emerges from the study and its policy  
implications:
**National power has two elements -- (a) the 'power potential' of a  
country, which depends on economic strength and general technological  
capability, and (b)military capability, which includes defense and  
strategic equipment and specific technologies needed for attaining  
military superiority. Together these define the actual power of a  
country, international ambition and determination, the 'will to  
power' play a role in transforming the 'power potential' into 'actual  
power.'
**Economic power is the foundation of national power. Economic  
strength is the only sustained and sustainable basis for national  
power and relative economic power is the basis for national power.  
Military power disproportionate to economic power can be used to  
enhance national power for a certain period of time; but it's not  
sustainable over long periods. Example -- the break up of the USSR  
where military and strategic competition could not be sustained by a  
declining economy.
**Need to distinguish between two categories of technology --  
commercial and strategic. Commercial technology is part and parcel of  
normal trade, financial flows and movement of managers and skilled  
personnel between open economies. Strategic technologies are  
technologies of power. They include military related technologies  
such as nuclear and aerospace and technology for producing advanced  
weapon systems and defense equipment. By definition strategic  
technologies are critical to national power and are not traded on  
commercial considerations.
**The economic capacity of a country at any point in time is measured  
by its GDP (Gross Domestic Product). The only way to compare the size  
of different economies is by valuing all goods and services produced  
in each, by using a common set of relative prices. Such a measure of  
a country's economy is referred to as Gross Domestic Product at  
Purchasing Power Parity.
**Per capita gross domestic product at purchasing power parity or GDP  
per person can be used as a summary measure of the 'general  
technological capability' of an economy.
**A nation's power potential (NPP),VIP2, can be defined as the  
multiple of the size of its economy measured by GDP at purchasing  
power parity (PPP) and its technological capability measured by its  
per capita GDP. The paper views the power potential of a country  
relative to the USA. Thus, the NPP is measured by its GDP at PPP  
relative to that of the USA. A country with a larger GDP is  
potentially more powerful than one with lower GDP. Implicitly  
population and per capita GDP have equal weight. If two countries  
have the same GDP but one is richer than the other (has higher per  
capita GDP), the richer country will be potentially more powerful.  
Since per capita GDP is an indicator of general technological  
capability, this multiplies the power potential of a given GDP.  
Overall it also means technology (per capita GDP) has a greater  
weight in determining  power potential than population.
**Actual power, VIP, depends on the amount and quality of strategic  
assets, including defense equipment, technology and skills, acquired  
by the country. The Virmani index of actual power (VIP) is defined as  
a function of power potential VIP2 and the strategic assets of the  
country relative to the strategic assets of the benchmark USA.
**Maximization of economic growth will maximize 'power potential'.  
Since Deng's market revolution, China's Leninist ruling party has  
absorbed this lesson fully and has been acting on it. India's  
democratic ruling elite has far too long ignored this lesson.  
Further, acceleration of economic growth in India will not only  
increase its power but will also (unlike in China) eliminate poverty  
faster. (This issue has been covered by Dr Virmani in a separate paper).
**Suggested benchmark values of the index for a country to be  
considered a global power are (20%) or a regional power (5%).
**GLOBAL VIP2s IN 2005 BY RANK
1. United States (100%)
2. Japan (27%)
3. China (25%)
4. Germany (17%)
5. France (12%)
6. United Kingdom (12%)
7. Italy (11%)
8. India (8.5%)
9. Canada (7.8%)
10. Russia (6.5%)
11. Spain (6.4%)
12. Brazil (5.8%)
13. Korea (5.5%)
14. Australia (4.7%)
**Thus, going by the benchmark values, there are currently two  
potential global powers, China and Japan, in addition to the  
undisputed and unique USA. Germany, which was a potential global  
power till a decade ago, is no longer one.
**The world can currently be best described as "uni-polar with a  
multi-polar fringe" constituted by the middle powers -- Japan, China,  
Germany. France, UK,  India and Russia (by analogy to the market  
structure, "monopoly with a competitive fringe").
**China is now the third strongest power in the world and will  
displace Japan in the second place in the next few years. Germany,  
France, UK and Italy will remain more powerful than India for some  
time even though India's economy is the fourth largest in the world  
in PPP terms. Russia's actual power is greater than its power  
potential because of the historical legacy of the Soviet empire.
**About national power: (a) an aspirant for 'great power' status must  
have a power potential of at least 35% of the predominant power, (b)  
a nation state must have a power potential of at least 40 % to be a  
credible 'great power' and maintain that status, (c) a rising power  
can be more assertive and credible than is perhaps warranted by the  
level of its power potential, (d) acquistion of strategic assets is  
critical for a 'great power' with less than 50 % 'power potential' to  
challenge the dominant pole and to convert the world into a bipolar  
one, (e) the minimum cut-off level of 'power potential' for  
bipolarity may be higher in an open globally integrated economy, but  
may also be more sustainable.
**Investment in strategic technology must be commensurate with the  
'power potential' of the economy so as to convert the 'potential into  
actual power. Too little investment will result in the potential  
remaining unrealized and aggressive powers will be tempted to exploit  
this weakness. Excessive investment can raise actual power in the  
short run but can undermine long term power potential by diverting  
funds from other essential public goods and services.
**India and China are still relatively poor countries and their high  
rank in the global power club is due to their large population  
relative to USA and other countries.The other side of this coin is  
that they have the greatest potential for increasing power, by  
raising their per capita income. For instance, if Russia's and  
Brazil's per capita income was raised to the level of USA, their  
'power potential' would still be only 50% and 60 % that of the USA  
respectively. In contrast, China and India's 'power potential' would  
equal that of USA if their per capita income was 50 % of  USA's.
**Among the members of the global power club, India and China have  
the greatest power gap -- that is the gap between their share of  
world GDP  at PPP and their share of world population. Therefore,  
these two countries have the greatest opportunity for closing it.
** UN population projections till 2050 show Russia's and Japan's  
population declining by 25%, while India's will increase to equal  
that of China. Thus, the major increase in 'power potential' will  
come only through increases in per capita income relative to USA's.  
The current unipolar world can become bilpolar or tripolar over the  
next 25 to 50 years if either or both of these countries continue to  
grow at a much faster rate than USA. The demographic situation of  
other nation states make it higly unlikely that any of them can  
compete with USA in the next 50 years. The only other possibility is  
for the European Monetary Union (EMU) or the European Union (EU) to  
coalesce into a 'virtual state', which looks unlikely at this point.
**The projected evolution of the 'power potential' of some of the  
larger members of the global VIP2 club, suggests that India will  
become more powerful than Italy in five years and France and UK in  
seven years. In about 10 years (2016) it is projected to become more  
powerful than Germany. By 2022 India's power potential will exceed  
20% making it a (potential) global power along with China and Japan,  
in addition to USA. No other country has the potential to join the  
ranks of global powers over the next 25 years. Within 20 years  
India's 'power potential' will exceed that of Japan. More  
dramatically, China will become the second strongest global power and  
continue to catch up with USA, reaching about 75% of USA's 'power  
potential' by 2025.
**China has since the mid-1980s followed a development model that  
fully uses the potential of globalization and global economic  
integration. The FDI-Export model adopted by it goes further and  
makes it heavily dependent for fast growth on USA, Japan and EU, both  
directly and indirectly through HK, Taiwan and ASEAN. It will be in a  
position to challenge US power in Asia when its 'power potential'  
reaches 60%, i.e. by around 2020. Even then the challenge is unlikely  
to be of a direct military nature, such as an invasion of Taiwan.  
However, the use of pressure to achieve the same objective is likely  
to rise progressively.
**With China's 'power potential' reaching 74% by 2025 and the third  
ranked power, India having a 'power potential' of only 26%, the world  
is likely to become bipolar. What this means is that China would very  
likely challenge the US in the economic and geo-political context and  
could conceivably initiate a creeping annexation of the South China  
Sea. One of the key tests of the ruling Chinese Communist Party's  
intentions will be whether it applies to a rising India the same  
principles and approaches that it expects the USA, Japan and the EU  
to apply to a rising China. If it takes a positive approach to  
India's rise (e.g. on permanent membership of UNSC, founding of EAEC,  
NSG), then it can rightly expect the same positive approach from  
others. (In seminars on China-India comparison, Chinese scholars talk  
about 'competition and cooperation' between the two countries, while  
Indian scholars talk only about 'cooperation'. No Chinese will  
however ever admit that 'competition' includes proliferation of wmd  
technology -- atomic weapons design, above 300 km range missiles --  
to Pakistan).
**Partnerships, formal or informal, with a country having a large,  
high quality stock of strategic capital can be highly beneficial to a  
relatively poor country with a lower level of general technological  
capability and strategic assets. Such a partnership can lower the  
financial and time cost (for the poor country) of building strategic  
assets and improving their quality. The growth of strategic capital  
can therefore be accelerated resulting in faster rise of VIP.
**There are, thus, two hypothetical developments that can result in a  
tri-polar or
multi-polar world instead of a bi-polar one in 20 years. (a) It's  
possible for a country to achieve a level of power (VIP) that is much  
larger than its power potential (as measured by VIP2) through  
acquisiton and development of strategic technology. India's power  
potential of 26% in 2025 will be higher than the average power  
potential of the USSR (23%) from 1950 to 1990 and equal to the power  
potential of the Soviet virtual state in 1955 when it became the  
second pole in a bipolar world. The only way India can achieve a  
level of strategic technology necessary for becoming a credible third  
pole by 2025 is through transfer of strategic technology and  
equipment from USA. The bold decision of President Bush to remove  
restrictions on the flow of commercial nuclear technology to India  
and to facilitate the flow of dual use and strategic technology could  
transform power relations in Asia and the world. Just as Nixon's  
opening to China did. This will be one of the decisions that marks  
President Bush's and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's place in  
history. If followed to its logical conclusion this could raise  
India's actual power (VIP) way above its 'power potential' (VIP2),  
leading to a tri-polar world by 2025. More realistically, it could  
accelerate the arrival of a tri-polar world. In other words, the  
period of bi-polarity will be shortened, an outcome that is in the  
mutual interest of both USA and India. The State Department  
spokesman's statement of March 25, 2005 in Washington that the USA  
would "help India become a world power" has a value for India if it  
means that the USA is willing to supply India the strategic  
technology to ensure that India's actual power (VIP) matches or  
exceeds its growing power potential (VIP2). The US President has  
authorized such a statement because he perceives a strategic benefit  
from having a natural and stable balance of power in Asia. The US  
administration and think tank scholars must convince the US Congress  
that a more powerful India is in the vital interest of USA.  
Acquisition of technology or skills from others is NOT a substitute  
for, but a complement to indigenous development for an aspiring  
global power like India. Acquisition of strategic assets (materials,  
equipment, technology, skills) from others must be used to (1) fill  
gaps and cover weakness in domestic capability; (2) speed up  
indigenous development of strategic assets and improve the  
effectiveness and quality of of strategic R&D; and (3) widen the  
ambit of strategic R&D into frontier areas not accessible previously.  
Further, the dominant power will try to reduce the flow of strategic  
technology from it to the potential challenger. As mentioned above,  
China will be strong enough to challenge US power by 2025. The US  
government has therefore taken steps during the last few years to  
stop such flows from the US, EU and Japan. In response China has been  
emphasizing that it is a middle-income country whose per capita  
income will not equal the USA's for 50 years or more. The Virmani  
paper shows that as far as global power relations are concerned, the  
relevant comparator is either the power potential VIP2 or the actual  
power VIP, not the relative per capita income. (b) Another  
development that can result in a tri-polar or multi-polar world  
around 2025 is if the emergence of China and India on the global  
scene forces the residents of the larger member-states of the EU to  
reconsider their stand on EU integration. Twenty years from now they  
may decide to constitute an EU government, based on direct elections  
by EU citizens, with complete power to act on all matters connected  
with international relations (defense, foreign affairs). Such an EU  
would be a global power. The 'power potential' of the European  
Monetary Union countries plus UK is currently (in 2005) a little less  
than 75% and is projected to decline to about 60%. However, the power  
potential of an EU virtual state would be about equal to that of  
China in 2025. (As long as the EU does not become a 'virtual state,'  
it is not a global power and its incentive for stopping the flow of  
strategic technology to China will be much lower than that of USA. On  
the other hand, if the EU becomes a 'virtual state', it will be a  
rival of China and its incentive to restrict the flow of strategic  
technology to China will rise sharply).
**If neither of the above two developments takes place, the world  
will still become tri-polar in about 30 years, with India as the  
weakest pole. Though the 'power potential' VIP2 of China is projected  
to be greater than that of USA in 30 years, its actual power VIP is  
likely to remain less for several decades because of the accumulated  
strategic assets of USA.
For the full text of the Virmani paper, please log on to http:// 
www.usindiafriendship.net/, turn to "Most recent Viewpoints", and  
click: "Virmani Index of Power (VIP): Measurement of Global Power  
Potential of Nations".
Cheers and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Ram Narayanan
US India Friendship
http://www.usindiafriendship.net
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