How to Survive in Scavenger Economies and Predator Economies
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How to Survive in Scavenger Economies and Predator Economies
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
The national economies of the world can be divided to the scavenger
and the predator types. The former are parasitic economies which
feed off the latter. The relationship is often not that of
symbiosis, where two parties maintain a mutually beneficial co-
existence. Here, one economy feeds off others in a way, which is
harmful, even detrimental to the hosts. But this interaction -
however undesirable - is the region's only hope.
The typology of scavenger economies reveals their sources of
sustenance:
Conjunctural - These economies feed off historical or economic
conjunctures or crises. They position themselves as a bridge between
warring or conflicting parties. Switzerland rendered this service to
Nazi Germany (1933-1945), Macedonia and Greece to Serbia (1992 to
the present), Cyprus aided and abetted Russia (1987 to the present),
Jordan for Iraq (1991 to the present), and now, Montenegro acts the
part for both Serbia and Kosovo. These economies consist of
smuggling, siege breaking, contraband, arms trade and illegal
immigration. They benefit economically by violating both
international and domestic laws and by providing international
outcasts and rogues with alternative routes of supply, and with
goods and services.
Criminal - These economies are infiltrated by criminal gangs or
suffused with criminal behaviour. Such infiltration is two phased:
the properly criminal phase and the money laundering one. In the
first phase, criminal activities yield income and result in wealth
accumulation. In the second one, the money thus generated is
laundered and legitimized. It is invested in legal, above-board
activities. The economy of the USA during the 19th century and in
the years of prohibition was partly criminal. It is reminiscent of
the Russian economy in the 1990s, permeated by criminal conduct as
it is. Russians often compare their stage of capitalist evolution to
the American "Wild West".
Piggyback Service Economies - These are economies, which provide
predator economies with services. These services are aimed at re-
establishing economic equilibrium in the host (predator) economies.
Tax shelters are a fine example of this variety. In many countries
taxes are way too high and result in the misallocation of economic
resources. Tax shelters offer a way of re-establishing the economic
balance and re-instating a regime of efficient allocation of
resources. These economies could be regarded as external appendages,
shock absorbers and regulators of their host economies. They feed
off market failures, market imbalances, arbitrage opportunities,
shortages and inefficiencies. Many post-Communist countries have
either made the provision of such services a part of their economic
life or are about to do so. Free zones, off shore havens, off shore
banking and transhipment ports proliferate, from Macedonia to
Archangelsk.
Aid Economies - Economies that derive most of their vitality from
aid granted them by donor countries, multilateral aid agencies and
NGOs. Many of the economies in transition belong to this class. Up
to 15% of their GDP is in the form of handouts, soft loans and
technical assistance. Rescheduling is another species of financial
subsidy and virtually all CEE countries have benefited from it. The
dependence thus formed can easily deteriorate into addiction. The
economic players in such economies engage mostly in lobbying and in
political manoeuvring - rather than in production.
Derivative or Satellite Economies - These are economies, which are
absolutely dependent upon or very closely correlated with other
economies. This is either because they conduct most of their trade
with these economies, or because they are a (marginal) member of a
powerful regional club (or aspire to become one), or because they
are under the economic (or geopolitical or military) umbrella of a
regional power or a superpower. Another variant is the single-
commodity or single-goods or single-service economies. Many
countries in Africa and many members of the OPEC oil cartel rely on
a single product for their livelihood. Russia, for instance, is
heavily dependent on proceeds from the sale of its energy products.
Most Montenegrins derive their livelihood, directly or indirectly,
from smuggling, bootlegging and illegal immigration. Drugs are a
major "export" earner in Macedonia and Albania.
Copycat Economies - These are economies that are based on legal or
(more often) illegal copying and emulation of intellectual property:
patents, brandnames, designs, industrial processes, other forms of
innovation, copyrighted material, etc. The prime example is Japan,
which constructed its whole mega-economy on these bases. Both
Bulgaria and Russia are Meccas of piracy. Though prosperous for a
time, these economies are dependent on and subject to the
vicissitudes of business cycles. They are capital sensitive,
inherently unstable and with no real long term prospects if they
fail to generate their own intellectual property. They reflect the
volatility of the markets for their goods and are overly exposed to
trade risks, international legislation and imports. Usually, they
specialize in narrow segments of manufacturing which only increases
the precariousness of their situation.
The Predator Economies can also be classified:
Generators of Intellectual Property - These are economies that
encourage and emphasize innovation and progress. They reward
innovators, entrepreneurs, non-conformism and conflict. They spew
out patents, designs, brands, copyrighted material and other forms
of packaged human creativity. They derive most of their income from
licensing and royalties and constitute one of the engines driving
globalization. Still, these economies are too poor to support the
complementary manufacturing and marketing activities. Their natural
counterparts are the "Industrial Bases". Within the former Eastern
Bloc, Russia, Poland, Hungary and Slovenia are, to a limited extent,
such generators. Israel is such an economy in the Middle East.
Industrial Bases - These are economies that make use of the
intellectual property generated by the former type within industrial
processes. They do not copy the intellectual property as it is.
Rather, they add to it important elements of adaptation to niche
markets, image creation, market positioning, packaging, technical
literature, combining it with other products or services, designing
and implementing the whole production process, market (demand)
creation, improvement upon the originals and value added services.
These contributions are so extensive that the end products, or
services can no longer to be identified with the originals, which
serve as mere triggers. Again, Poland, Hungary, Slovenia (and to a
lesser extent, Croatia) come to mind.
Consumer Oriented Economies - These are Third Wave (Alvin Toffler's
term), services, information and knowledge driven economies. The
over-riding set of values is consumer oriented. Wealth formation and
accumulation are secondary. The primary activities are concerned
with fostering markets and maintaining them. These "weightless"
economies concentrate on intangibles: advertising, packaging,
marketing, sales promotion, education, entertainment, servicing,
dissemination of information, knowledge formation, trading, trading
in symbolic assets (mainly financial), spiritual pursuits, and other
economic activities which enhance the consumer's welfare
(pharmaceuticals, for instance). These economies are also likely to
sport a largish public sector, most of it service oriented. No
national economy in CEE qualifies as "Consumer Oriented", though
there are pockets of consumer-oriented entrepreneurship within each
one.
The Trader Economies - These economies are equivalent to the
cardiovascular system. They provide the channels through which goods
and services are exchanged. They do this by trading or assuming
risks, by providing physical transportation and telecommunications,
and by maintaining an appropriately educated manpower to support all
these activities. These economies are highly dependent on the
general health of international trade. Many of the CEE economies are
Trader economies. The openness ratio (trade divided by GDP) of most
CEE countries is higher than the G7 countries'. Macedonia, for
instance, has a GDP of 3.6 Billion US dollars and exports and
imports of c. 2 billion US dollars. These are the official figures.
Probably, another 0.5 billion Us dollars in trade go unreported.
additionally, it has one of the lowest weighted customs rate in the
world. Openness to trade is an official policy, actively pursued.
These economies are predatory in the sense that they engage in zero-
sum games. A contract gained by a Slovenian company - is a contract
lost by a Croatian one. Luckily, in this last decade, the economic
cake tended to grow and the sum of zero sum games was more welfare
to all involved. These vibrant economies - the hope of benighted and
blighted regions - are justly described as "engines" because they
pull all other (scavenger) economies with them. They are not likely
to do so forever. But their governments have assimilated the lessons
of the 1930s. Protectionism is bad for everyone involved -
especially for economic engines. Openness to trade, protection of
property rights and functioning institutions increase both the
number and the scope of markets.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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